Triennium: A 3-year Pandemic Recap

Although time seemed to stand still, many things happened in the last three years.

Agustín Muñoz-Sanz
Microbial Instincts

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The current month of December 2022 will mark the first three years since newscasts around the world, social networks, and the communication offices of official health agencies spread a news item of unsuspected scope at the time. It was the outbreak of a new epidemic infection in a populous Chinese city of more than eleven million inhabitants: Wuhan, in the province of Hubei. So naturally, the disease did not yet have an official name.

It soon became known that the causative virus was a new member of the well-known and numerous Coronaviridae family, provisionally named nCoV-2019. A viral family known because of some members, two of the four so-called endemic respiratory coronaviruses (229E, NL63, OC43, and HKU1), identified by science since the 1960s.

These coronaviruses cause 5–30% of upper respiratory infections in children and young people. In other words, they are responsible for some of the numerous and annoying colds that recur every autumn-winter season. They can appear in the same season because they do not leave lasting immunity, although they can generate a certain…

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