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Natalia Vladimirovna Kovalevskaia, Iuliia Alexandrovna Fedoritenko y William Leahy
Chaos Theory: The Case of the COVID-19 Pandemic in Wuhan, China from the perspective of  
 
international relations
organized criticality force us to reconsider this statement. Both concepts 
show the disproportionate effects that small actors can provoke. On this 
basis, every actor, be it governments, organizations, or individuals in 
political critical systems, produces an active force that provokes a change in 
the original position and creates a critical state (Byeon, 2000). And the case 
with coronavirus in Wuhan illustrated that clearly.
5. Chaos and epidemic theory. Periodic pandemics in China
International relations are an aperiodic system. The number of people 
rises and falls almost regularly, epidemics begin and continue, contrary to 
human hopes, also in a certain order.
Nevertheless, epidemiologists are well aware that massive outbreaks of 
diseases appear, as a rule, with a certain cyclicality - regularly or irregularly, 
go on the offensive and retreat periodically.
The outbreak of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) in Wuhan shows 
some interesting parallels to pandemics close to our days with similar 
symptoms, which also began in China. In February 1957, the world was 
shocked by the 1957–1958 inuenza pandemic, also known as the Asian u, 
the starting point of which was the Chinese province of Guizhou. It should 
be noted that those infected died from the disease within a few days. At 
rst, the symptoms typical of the u appeared: headache and muscle pain, 
cough, and fever. And then pneumonia, which arises as a complication, led 
to death (Viboud et al., 2016).
Later,  scientists  found  out  that  the  “Asian  u”  was  caused  by  a  new 
subtype of the virus A (H2N2), originating from strains of avian and human 
inuenza viruses.
During the development of the pandemic, namely from 1957 to 1958, as 
a result of infection, according to WHO, 1.1 million people died - according 
to unconrmed information (Viboud et al., 2016).
By 1957, the disease had stopped spreading, but a decade later, the virus 
mutated and returned, leading to a new pandemic that did not leave the 
world from 1968 to 1969. This disease was called the “Hong Kong u” - its 
causative agent was, again, a previously unknown subtype of the A (H3N2) 
virus (Jester et al., 2020). It began in Hong Kong - while initially he only 
walked by sea, infecting the crews and passengers of ships. And since this 
is a large port city, it spread rapidly further. Air travel by an estimated 
160 million persons during the pandemic facilitated rapid transmission 
worldwide (Grais et al., 2020).
Since  their  emergence,  inuenza  A(H3N2)  viruses  have  caused 
substantial cumulative morbidity and mortality worldwide during seasonal