Buckley, Chris, Kirkpatrick, David, Qin, Amy, and Hernandez, Javier. “How COVID-19 Slipped China’s Grasp.” The New York Times, 30 December 2020, www.nytimes.com/2020/12/30/world/asia/china-coronavirus.html?searchResultPosition=9.

Dr. Zhong Nanshan, now 84, who rpeviously relieved the world of a similar epidemic, SARS, 17 years ago was rush to Wuhan, a city in central China, to investigate a strange new coronavirus. When Dr. Zhong discovered the rapid spread of the virus, he rushed to Beijing to sound the alarm. The first alarm was sounded on December 30th, 2019, however officials in both Wuhan and Beijing hid the extent of the coronavirus. Delaying the the signaling of the public alarm unleashed the virus making it harder for contamination against the rest of the world. Immediately COIS-19 reminded some scientists of the SARS epidemic of 2002-2003 which was caused by a coronavirus outbreak in China and killed nearly 800 people worldwide. It was founded the coronavirus roughly similar to SARS. Both SARS and COVID-19 had been spread from animal to person and then from person to person cause serious and some fatal illnesses. A very ignorant and infuriated President Trump spent months blaming Beijing for what he called “the China virus.”  “One early study projected that China could have reduced the total number of cases by 66 percent had officials acted a week earlier. Action three weeks earlier could have dropped the caseload by 95 percent.”

 

Belluck, Pam. “Some Long Covid Patients Feel Much Better After Getting the Vaccine. “The New York Times, 17 March 2021, www.nytimes.com/2021/03/17/health/coronavirus-patients-and-vaccine-effects.html.

 

  • summarize one article with at least 8 sentences