Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
National

Canadian Scientists Fight Coronavirus Pandemic On Dozens Of Fronts

The Canadian Press, 23 Mar, 2020 07:42 PM

    Public health officials across Canada and around the world are working flat out to test as many people as possible for the novel coronavirus.

     

    Srinivas Murthy is working to figure out how to help them if the result is positive.

     

    "What medicines work?" he asks. "We don't know."

     

    Murthy, a professor of critical care at the University of British Columbia, is one of hundreds of Canadian scientists spending long hours in their labs and by their computers trying to help governments and clinicians figure out how to deal with the COVID-19 pandemic.

     

    Earlier this month, the federal government awarded almost $27 million in grants to coronavirus-related research. The money is funding 47 projects across the country.

     

    There are studies into faster diagnostic tests, how the disease is transmitted and the structure of the virus itself. Other scientists are considering why some people ignore public health warnings and how the public perceives risk.

     

    Some are asking how to keep health workers safe. Some are looking at the effects on children or Indigenous people or on food security. Lessons from past public-health crises are also being studied.

     

    "It's basic research. It's public health research. It's community-based research," said Yoav Keynan of the National Collaborating Centre for Infectious Diseases at the University of Manitoba.

     

    "Many are redirecting their efforts to the virus. There are many things that need to be worked on."

     

    Murthy is trying to find out how hospitals can treat patients who have the COVID-19 virus. Each virus is different, he said, and what works on one won't work on another.

     

    "This is a new virus," he said. "We don't know what specific medication works."

     

    That means trying familiar drugs that have been effective on other viruses. Using what's known about this coronavirus, Murthy estimates the chances of old drugs working on it and starts with the most likely candidate.

     

    "We build on what we've already got," he said.

     

    Right now, he's working with an antiviral agent that was originally developed in the fight against AIDS. Clinical trials with COVID-19 patients who have agreed to participate are the next step.

     

    "We know it's safe," said Murthy. "We don't know if it's effective."

     

    When you include public health and medical personnel involved, the scientific fight against the coronavirus now involves thousands of people, Keynan said.

     

    "There are many gaps in understanding the transmission of the virus — how long the virus stays on surfaces or the proportion of individuals that contract the virus but remain asymptomatic and serve as a reservoir for spreading the virus."

     

    The good news is that public-health research has come a long way since the SARS virus swept through 26 countries in 2003.

     

    "We have better communication, better knowledge-sharing and better lab capacity," said Keynan.

     

    "Sharing of information globally and within Canada has improved dramatically over the last 17 years. And we're going to need all of it."

     

    Canadian scientists are at the forefront of worldwide efforts to bend the curve of COVID-19 infections down, said Keynan.

     

    "Canadian researchers are global leaders in infectious diseases and virology and we have better capacity than we had in 2003 to be meaningful contributors. We are making contributions."

     

    But no single lab or nation is going to come up with all the answers on its own, Keynan said.

     

    "This is not a Canadian effort. This is a global effort."

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Blockade On CP Rail Tracks In Kahnawake Comes Down After More Than Three Weeks

    KAHNAWAKE, Que. - A blockade in the Mohawk community of Kahnawake that has halted rail traffic south of Montreal for more than three weeks is being dismantled.

    Blockade On CP Rail Tracks In Kahnawake Comes Down After More Than Three Weeks

    Academics Say Indigenous Perspectives Still Lacking In Canadian STEM Studies

    TORONTO - In order to learn about how Canada's Indigenous astronomers see the skies, Caroline Ormrod had to look overseas.    

    Academics Say Indigenous Perspectives Still Lacking In Canadian STEM Studies

    Canada Spearheading Effort To Better Protect Airborne Passenger Flights

    Canada is spearheading what Transport Minister Marc Garneau hopes will become an international effort to protect civilian airliners around the world from being shot down over conflict zones.

    Canada Spearheading Effort To Better Protect Airborne Passenger Flights

    Supreme Court Will Not Hear Trans Mountain Pipeline Expansion Appeal Cases

    Supreme Court Will Not Hear Trans Mountain Pipeline Expansion Appeal Cases
    OTTAWA - The Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project has cleared another legal hurdle.    

    Supreme Court Will Not Hear Trans Mountain Pipeline Expansion Appeal Cases

    Alek Minassian Admits To Planning, Carrying Out Toronto Van Attack

    Alek Minassian Admits To Planning, Carrying Out Toronto Van Attack
    TORONTO - A man who killed 10 people when he drove a van into crowds of pedestrians on a busy Toronto sidewalk in 2018 has admitted to planning and carrying out the attack, court heard Thursday.

    Alek Minassian Admits To Planning, Carrying Out Toronto Van Attack

    Starbucks, Second Cup Halt Use Of Reusable Cups Amid Novel Coronavirus Outbreak

    Two major coffee chains have stopped serving coffee in reusable cups brought by customers amid the novel coronavirus outbreak.    

    Starbucks, Second Cup Halt Use Of Reusable Cups Amid Novel Coronavirus Outbreak