Is the coronavirus outbreak as bad as SARS?

On the city street, two girls in blindfolds, the concept of the spread of the coronavirus from China, toned. E
(Image credit: Shutterstock)

As the new coronavirus continues to cross international borders, the two key questions on public health officials' minds are: 'How deadly is it?' and 'Can it be contained?'.

The two outbreaks in recent memory that give the most insight into these questions are the 2002-2003 SARS outbreak, which spread from China to 26 other countries but was contained after eight months, and the 2009 H1N1 influenza pandemic, which originated in Mexico and spread globally despite all containment efforts.

Maciej F. Boni
Associate Professor of Biology, Pennsylvania State University

Maciej F. Boni is an associate professor of Biology at Pennsylvania State University, whose research focuses on human influenza epidemiology and evolution, evaluating population-level malaria treatment strategies with individual-based microsimulation models, phylogenetic analysis of avian influenza evolution in southern Vietnam, economic epidemiology of avian influenza, and evaluating population-level efficacy of a potential dengue vaccine with mathematical models.