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      CoViD-19: An early intervention therapeutic strategy to prevent developing a severe disease as an alternative approach to control the pandemic

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      research-article
        1 ,
      ScienceOpen Preprints
      ScienceOpen
      CoViD-19, Coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2, Early Intervention, CoViD19, SARS-CoV, Essential Oils, Oropharyngeal sanitisation, Steam, Pandemic
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            Abstract

            While we wait for a confirmed drug or a vaccine for CoViD-19, it may be possible to intervene early to prevent the virus causing a severe disease to offer an alternative therapeutic strategy to control the pandemic. The global burden of CoViD-19 on the healthcare system can be significantly reduced by targeting CoViD-19 patients with or without symptoms who are self-isolating at home or in quarantine. If any therapeutic support can be offered to this group of patients that could attenuate the virus within the upper respiratory tract during the early stages of CoViD-19, it can give the body the time to produce enough antibodies to recover naturally from the disease before progressing into severe disease. An early intervention can, therefore, prevent the virus to get down the lower respiratory tract, reduce the number of cases with severe disease involving pneumonia and the need for hospitalisation. This article presents a simple yet holistic treatment strategy that involves inhaling steam supplemented with essential oils possessing wide spectrum antimicrobial properties in conjunction with oropharyngeal sanitisation to all those who are CoViD-19 positive or are under self-isolation due to symptoms. The approach is very simple, cheap, and effective in relieving the symptoms of the disease and is likely to reduce the viral load in the upper respiratory tract that may help recover from the infection. Since there is no vaccine or treatment yet approved to prevent or treat the CoViD-19, the importance of early intervention is invaluable in reducing the global disease burden. In the authors opinion, this strategy may be very effective to nip the infection in the bud before it gets difficult to treat and therefore, have a potential to significantly reduce the CoViD-19 associated hospitalisation.

            Content

            Author and article information

            Journal
            ScienceOpen Preprints
            ScienceOpen
            23 May 2020
            Affiliations
            [1 ] University of Huddersfield, United Kingdom
            Author information
            https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7668-5013
            Article
            10.14293/S2199-1006.1.SOR-.PPURWMT.v1
            e4998294-e315-4a68-a4f2-22b96fa5d91d

            This work has been published open access under Creative Commons Attribution License CC BY 4.0 , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Conditions, terms of use and publishing policy can be found at www.scienceopen.com .

            History
            : 23 May 2020
            Funding
            Not Applicable Not Applicable

            Data sharing not applicable to this article as no datasets were generated or analysed during the current study.
            General medicine,Medicine,Pharmacology & Pharmaceutical medicine,Infectious disease & Microbiology
            CoViD-19,Coronavirus,SARS-CoV-2,Early Intervention,CoViD19,Pandemic,SARS-CoV,Essential Oils,Oropharyngeal sanitisation,Steam

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