BMJ Global Health (Jul 2020)

The COVID-19 pandemic: diverse contexts; different epidemics—how and why?

  • Peter Aaby,
  • Seye Abimbola,
  • Kristien Verdonck,
  • Sameh Al-Awlaqi,
  • Gerald Bloom,
  • Joël Arthur Kiendrébéogo,
  • Alexandre Delamou,
  • Por Ir,
  • Kefilath Bello,
  • Jean-Paul Dossou,
  • Remco van de Pas,
  • Wim Van Damme,
  • Ritwik Dahake,
  • Brecht Ingelbeen,
  • Edwin Wouters,
  • Guido Vanham,
  • Stefaan Van der Borght,
  • Devadasan Narayanan,
  • Ian Van Engelgem,
  • Mohamed Ali Ag Ahmed,
  • Vincent De Brouwere,
  • Helmut Kloos,
  • Andreas Kalk,
  • NS Prashanth,
  • Jean-Jacques Muyembe-Tamfum,
  • Placide Mbala,
  • Steve Ahuka-Mundeke,
  • Yibeltal Assefa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2020-003098
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 7

Abstract

Read online

It is very exceptional that a new disease becomes a true pandemic. Since its emergence in Wuhan, China, in late 2019, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), the virus that causes COVID-19, has spread to nearly all countries of the world in only a few months. However, in different countries, the COVID-19 epidemic takes variable shapes and forms in how it affects communities. Until now, the insights gained on COVID-19 have been largely dominated by the COVID-19 epidemics and the lockdowns in China, Europe and the USA. But this variety of global trajectories is little described, analysed or understood. In only a few months, an enormous amount of scientific evidence on SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 has been uncovered (knowns). But important knowledge gaps remain (unknowns). Learning from the variety of ways the COVID-19 epidemic is unfolding across the globe can potentially contribute to solving the COVID-19 puzzle. This paper tries to make sense of this variability—by exploring the important role that context plays in these different COVID-19 epidemics; by comparing COVID-19 epidemics with other respiratory diseases, including other coronaviruses that circulate continuously; and by highlighting the critical unknowns and uncertainties that remain. These unknowns and uncertainties require a deeper understanding of the variable trajectories of COVID-19. Unravelling them will be important for discerning potential future scenarios, such as the first wave in virgin territories still untouched by COVID-19 and for future waves elsewhere.