Since the outbreak of a new strain of coronavirus late last year, health workers and governments have been rushing to limit transmission by deploying containment tactics and anti-contamination campaigns. But, as the virus spreads around the world, what are scientists doing to help our bodies fight off or resist this new infectious disease?\n \nViruses that cause human disease can be notoriously tricky to tackle. They don\u2019t respond to antibiotics, can spread rapidly between human hosts, and even evolve improved ways of working as they multiply. Presenter Marnie Chesterton heads to the University of Oxford\u2019s Nuffield Department of Medicine to meet the researchers who are urgently searching for solutions. Professor Tao Dong is Director of Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences Oxford Institute, collaborating with colleagues on the ground in China to see how Chinese patients\u2019 immune systems are responding to the virus, which could inform vaccine design. Professor Sarah Gilbert leads the Jenner Institute\u2019s influenza vaccine and emerging pathogens programme. She\u2019s been developing a vaccine against another strain of coronavirus that caused the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) outbreak, and is using the same technology to generate a new vaccine against the 2019 coronavirus. And, whilst that\u2019s being developed, there is a possibility that some existing antiviral drugs may even help infected patients \u2013 Professor Peter Horby is working with colleagues in China on clinical trials to see what might work. CrowdScience goes into the laboratories using cutting edge science to combat coronavirus. \n \nPresented by Marnie Chesterton \nProduced by Jen Whyntie for the BBC World Service
(Photo: Coronavirus Credit: Getty Images)