Sunday, December 20, 2020
Wednesday, January 29, 2020
Wuhan virus cases
By January 30, there were 7,816 pneumonia cases in 17 countries and 170 deaths.
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According to CNA, the condition of the coronavirus, known as the pneumonia virus, has risen to a total of 7,816 cases in 17 countries, including 11:00 am local time on January 30, 2020, with 170 deaths and an increase in the number of deaths.
Tuesday, January 28, 2020
The first case of Wanhan virus was cured
The first case of Wanhan virus was cured
China According to the Shanghai Municipal Health Commission, the first case of the wolf virus, which has become widely suspected, has started its treatment. The drug used is a drug made for HIV.
The first woman to be cured of the Wuhan virus was 56 years old. Chen: He was successfully discharged from the hospital. Doctors say that the drug he is treating is a drug called Nelfinavir for HIV patients.
Nelfinavir is a drug that rapidly reduces the spread of viruses from cells. When Chen was tested for the drug, he saw development along the respiratory tract. A CT scan was performed.
After two blood tests, it was astonishing to see that Wuhan virus was completely clean. Chen has been in the hospital since January 12. She suffered from a flu-like illness and was hospitalized.
She is a city of Wuhan. This is where the Coronavirus virus began to spread. Another 46-year-old man was successfully treated in Zhejiang province in eastern China.
The man is Yang, a Wuhan resident. It is not clear how Yang was treated.
China According to the Shanghai Municipal Health Commission, the first case of the wolf virus, which has become widely suspected, has started its treatment. The drug used is a drug made for HIV.
The first woman to be cured of the Wuhan virus was 56 years old. Chen: He was successfully discharged from the hospital. Doctors say that the drug he is treating is a drug called Nelfinavir for HIV patients.
Nelfinavir is a drug that rapidly reduces the spread of viruses from cells. When Chen was tested for the drug, he saw development along the respiratory tract. A CT scan was performed.
After two blood tests, it was astonishing to see that Wuhan virus was completely clean. Chen has been in the hospital since January 12. She suffered from a flu-like illness and was hospitalized.
She is a city of Wuhan. This is where the Coronavirus virus began to spread. Another 46-year-old man was successfully treated in Zhejiang province in eastern China.
The man is Yang, a Wuhan resident. It is not clear how Yang was treated.
New hospital in Wuhan is nearing completion in four days
A new hospital in Wuhan has been completed by half in four days.
The new 1000-bed hospital is expected to be completed by the end of this week. The new hospital was named Huoshenshan, meaning Fire God Mountain Hospital. It will be built on six acres of land, with temporary buildings and container containers to begin receiving patients on February 3. In 2003, a similar hospital was established in Beijing due to SARS. It is expected to build a total of four new hospitals due to the new Coronavirus virus, which has already killed more than 100 people.
The new 1000-bed hospital is expected to be completed by the end of this week. The new hospital was named Huoshenshan, meaning Fire God Mountain Hospital. It will be built on six acres of land, with temporary buildings and container containers to begin receiving patients on February 3. In 2003, a similar hospital was established in Beijing due to SARS. It is expected to build a total of four new hospitals due to the new Coronavirus virus, which has already killed more than 100 people.
Monday, January 27, 2020
First case of coronavirus in China treated
First case of coronavirus in China treated
HIV drugs are used to treat coronavirus patients
Chen, a 56-year-old woman, was cured of the disease.
Beijing's state-run Beijing Daily News reported on Monday that two lungs undergoing a CT scan and two independent blood tests were confirmed to be free of coronavirus.
After further tests to prevent the spread of the disease, the patient was allowed to return to his stable.
Ms Chen, who lives in Wanhan, was suffering from flu-like symptoms on January 10 and was hospitalized on January 12.
The Shanghai Health Commission said that after receiving almost two weeks of treatment, he was free and was admitted to the hospital.
Chinese doctors are treating HIV with cocaine and preventing it from spreading to other cells, a study has shown, a drug called Nelfinavir, which can reduce the production of the virus.
Meanwhile, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said he would help Japanese people return to Wuhan.
The Japanese government says there are about 710 Japanese nationals in Wuhan.
Wuhan virus was in Ten Countries
Wuhan virus was in Ten Countries
Yesterday, there were 688 new cases reported on 25-1-2020, so there are now 1975 confirmed cases.
Yesterday, 87 patients were diagnosed
There have been 324 cases of previously suspected patients
Yesterday, 16 patients went missing
A total of 56 people have died
49 patients have been treated for treatment and have been admitted to hospital
Yesterday there were 1309 people who posted the report that it is possible the disease was possible
As a result, there are now 2,684 suspected patients
A total of 23,431 people suspected to have had close contact with patients were monitored and monitored.
Now 325 people can be removed from monitoring
At present, 21,556 people have been monitored for infection
There are five cases in Hong Kong, two in Macao and three in Taiwan.
There are also cases outside China
There are 10 countries with 23 patients
1. Thais 4
2. Japanese 2
3. South Koreans 2
4. Americans 2
5. Vietnamese 2
6. Singaporeans 3
7. Malaysians 3
8. Nepalese 1
9. French 3
10. Australian 1
The investigation is underway and is investigating new patients and monitoring of those who have been exposed to the virus.
This video file is a video of themselves supporting Wuhan in their apartment
Wuhan also felt sorry for everyone. How scared would they be? How weak are they? How strong are they?
This video file is a video of themselves supporting Wuhan in their apartment
"Wuhan ... Fighting
Wuhan ... Fighting "
May the natural disaster escape quickly! Make sure everyone is safe. Be healthy
This video file is a video of themselves supporting Wuhan in their apartment
"Wuhan ... Fighting
Wuhan ... Fighting "
May the natural disaster escape quickly! Make sure everyone is safe. Be healthy
Saturday, January 25, 2020
#The killer "Gold Shop Robber' had been arrested
Accused of name Mr. Prasittichai Khaokaew, 38, is a school director in Lopburi province. ......................................... .. of the shocking case of the criminal robbery of the Aurora Gold Shop in the famous department of Muang Lopburi Using firearms to keep the sound of fire open the way to the villagers and gold shop staff Resulting in a total of 3 deaths .. among these, a 2 year old boy was killed by a crossfire In the midst of the stampede of the villagers walking in the shopping mall The incident occurred on January 9, 62, past .. after the case and the killing is finished Then return to normal life Act like nothing happens !! What do you mind ..Character shocked friends, don't think the director is ruthless, revealing that the director has a soundproofing gun Used to play at school And this is the face of robbers #The gold shop robber
Accused of name Mr. Prasittichai Khaokaew, 38, is a school director in Lopburi province. ......................................... .. of the shocking case of the criminal robbery of the Aurora Gold Shop in the famous department of Muang Lopburi Using firearms to keep the sound of fire open the way to the villagers and gold shop staff Resulting in a total of 3 deaths .. among these, a 2 year old boy was killed by a crossfire In the midst of the stampede of the villagers walking in the shopping mall The incident occurred on January 9, 62, past .. after the case and the killing is finished Then return to normal life Act like nothing happens !! What do you mind ..Character shocked friends, don't think the director is ruthless, revealing that the director has a soundproofing gun Used to play at school And this is the face of robbers #The gold shop robber
Former accused of a gold robbery case in thailand
Former accused of a gold robbery case. Sentenced for 10 months. Was posted for alleged gold robber shooting 3 bodies. Lop Buri inform the police to condemn the post-people damaged.
At 3:00 pm on January 13, at the spot, Mr. Ekthawee Kongkhawari, 36, a former accused of robbing a 4 million baht gold shop from Pak Kred district, Nonthaburi province in 2013, reported the case. And Police Lieutenant Colonel Ying Natthaya Wongruchairot, Deputy Chief of Investigation (Investigation) kg 3, the Police Department, after the leader has captured the arrest warrant And personal information to be posted in the social world By claiming to be the suspect who had committed the killing of 3 deadly bodies for outrage in the Robinson Department Store, Lopburi
Mr Ekthawee revealed today that the prosecution has been reported to about 7-8 people who posted and shared the said arrest warrant, which has both a person and a Facebook page. Some pages have thousands of followers. There are thousands of shares in just a few hours.
By knowing the story after a friend sent him a picture yesterday Therefore was very shocked And hurried to report to Samsen Police Station, which believes that the said image comes from the police Take the old information that had caused the robbery of a gold shop in 2013 to inspect, but it came out Confirmed that the latest cause in Lop Buri province is definitely not true Because there is CCTV evidence that he was working on the day of the accident After the incident, the brother in Kamphaeng Phet reported that a police officer had called. Which if called to inquire about the case He was willing to cooperate fully.
"For his old case Used to create a robbery from Aurora Gold Shop In the Big C mall in Ladprao area in 2013, the gold was worth around 1 million baht, together with the 3 actors who also use firearms. But do not want to take someone's life Because everyone avoids physical abuse Until he was arrested and sentenced to 25 years in prison, he pleaded guilty, reduced the sentence to 11 years and reduced the sentence to 7 years, just came out 10 months ago, now has started a new life. Everything is going well. Because he has work and studies But instead, an incident like this occurred Which affects the family around And the job because the supervisor who gave him the opportunity to work has not yet talked about this If sharing something, you should study the information first. If he is unemployed, he does not want to cause trouble again Most recently, there was only one person who came in to apologize for not knowing If editing and deleting They may withdraw the report, "Mr Ekthawee concluded. Initially, the investigative officers were interrogating the injured person before considering the evidence and reporting the supervisor further.
see all photos below:
By knowing the story after a friend sent him a picture yesterday Therefore was very shocked And hurried to report to Samsen Police Station, which believes that the said image comes from the police Take the old information that had caused the robbery of a gold shop in 2013 to inspect, but it came out Confirmed that the latest cause in Lop Buri province is definitely not true Because there is CCTV evidence that he was working on the day of the accident After the incident, the brother in Kamphaeng Phet reported that a police officer had called. Which if called to inquire about the case He was willing to cooperate fully.
"For his old case Used to create a robbery from Aurora Gold Shop In the Big C mall in Ladprao area in 2013, the gold was worth around 1 million baht, together with the 3 actors who also use firearms. But do not want to take someone's life Because everyone avoids physical abuse Until he was arrested and sentenced to 25 years in prison, he pleaded guilty, reduced the sentence to 11 years and reduced the sentence to 7 years, just came out 10 months ago, now has started a new life. Everything is going well. Because he has work and studies But instead, an incident like this occurred Which affects the family around And the job because the supervisor who gave him the opportunity to work has not yet talked about this If sharing something, you should study the information first. If he is unemployed, he does not want to cause trouble again Most recently, there was only one person who came in to apologize for not knowing If editing and deleting They may withdraw the report, "Mr Ekthawee concluded. Initially, the investigative officers were interrogating the injured person before considering the evidence and reporting the supervisor further.
see all photos below:
10 cities are in lock down as China battle to build emergency hospital within six days.
10 cities are in lock down as China battle to build emergency hospital within six days.
What it will take to stop the Wuhan coronavirus.
(CNN)On this date 17 years ago, I was covering the severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) virus for several months as it spread across Asia, eventually reaching 37 countries, sickening 8,098 people and killing 774 of them.
So, as I read the first reports of a cluster of animal-market related illnesses, with the first patient exhibiting symptoms of pneumonia as early as December 12, 2019, I had a chilling sense of déjà vu. By New Year's Eve, it was obvious something akin to SARS -- as it turns out, the Wuhan coronavirus is in the same family of viruses as SARS and MERS (Middle East respiratory syndrome) -- was unfolding in China.
The mysterious pneumonia virus that emerged from a live animal market in China's central city of Wuhan last month has now infected far too many people, over far too vast a geographic area, to be easily controlled.
The Wuhan coronavirus -- part of a family of viruses that are common among animals and can cause fever as well as respiratory symptoms when transmitted to humans -- has been found in cities all over China, and travelers have since spread the virus to several countries, including Singapore, Japan, Vietnam, Taiwan and South Korea as well as Hong Kong and Macau.
The first American case -- involving a man in his 30s who recently traveled to Wuhan -- was confirmed outside Seattle on January 21, before the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced on Friday a second case in Chicago. As of Friday, at least 41 people have died from the illness.
I warned that China appeared to be taking more aggressive steps shutting down social media posts, arresting people accused of spreading "rumors" and capping the flow of information about the outbreak than it was halting the transmission of the virus. For more than a week, the reported number of cases barely changed after local authorities shut down the Huanan Wholesale Seafood Market, the putative source of the virus. And authorities insisted the cause was neither SARS, nor similar viruses like the flu, avian flu, or MERS.
They also repeatedly stated that there was no evidence of human-to-human spread of the disease (which turned out to be false), leading the World Health Organization and outside world to believe that closing the live animal market effectively brought the outbreak to a halt.
The first American case -- involving a man in his 30s who recently traveled to Wuhan -- was confirmed outside Seattle on January 21, before the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced on Friday a second case in Chicago. As of Friday, at least 41 people have died from the illness.
I warned that China appeared to be taking more aggressive steps shutting down social media posts, arresting people accused of spreading "rumors" and capping the flow of information about the outbreak than it was halting the transmission of the virus. For more than a week, the reported number of cases barely changed after local authorities shut down the Huanan Wholesale Seafood Market, the putative source of the virus. And authorities insisted the cause was neither SARS, nor similar viruses like the flu, avian flu, or MERS.
They also repeatedly stated that there was no evidence of human-to-human spread of the disease (which turned out to be false), leading the World Health Organization and outside world to believe that closing the live animal market effectively brought the outbreak to a halt.
As recently as January 18, the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention posted stern warnings against paying heed to "rumors" and insisted there were no cases of the disease in hospitals outside of Wuhan, adding that the outbreak was "preventable and controllable."
Officially, there are more than 1,000 cases of the Wuhan coronavirus. Unofficially, however, the toll is likely to be far higher, and more than 20 Chinese cities have reported cases of the coronavirus.
Separate studies from London's Imperial College and Hong Kong University Medical School estimated that some 1,300 to 1,700 people were infected during the first week of January, when Chinese officials reported just a handful of cases and downplayed the epidemic's severity. This week, the Imperial College team estimated that there were a total of 4,000 cases (with the possibility of up to 9,700 cases in the worst-case scenario) by January 18, when the official tally was still at 62 cases.
Using a different statistical method, scientists at Northeastern University in Boston reckon that 5,900 were infected by January 23.
Despite the wide disparity in the figures, this new epidemic seems poised to eclipse the scale of the 2003 SARS epidemic, and is already well outside of the reach of simple control measures.
Hong Kong University virologist Guan Yi, who was part of the team that discovered the SARS virus, tells the Washington Post that the epidemic is so out of control now that "a bigger outbreak is certain." He said that even with a conservative estimate, the outbreak could be 10 times bigger than the SARS epidemic -- with a reach of more than 80,000 cases.
Speaking on background, other SARS veterans tell me there may already be "many thousands" of infected individuals in China.
Because authorities initially downplayed the seriousness of the outbreak instead of implementing swift control measures, people have traveled to and from Wuhan -- a major transportation hub with a population of 11 million people -- and unwittingly carried the virus with them.
Chinese authorities have shut down flights, ferries, highways, and trains leaving Wuhan, as well as public transportation within the city. Twelve other cities in China have issued travel restrictions in an unprecedented move to contain the virus just days before the Lunar New Year on January 25, which usually ushers the largest human migration on earth, with hundreds of millions of people traveling to see relatives.
Following my January 8 claim that the Chinese government was covering up a significant epidemic, pressure mounted from United Nations agencies, Ministries of Health worldwide and the scientific community. Finally, Wuhan provincial communist party chief Jiang Chaoliang, and his counterparts in neighboring districts, came under veiled criticism from President Xi Jinping who ordered Party leaders to "put people's safety and health as the top priority and take effective measures to curb the spread of the virus."
Separate studies from London's Imperial College and Hong Kong University Medical School estimated that some 1,300 to 1,700 people were infected during the first week of January, when Chinese officials reported just a handful of cases and downplayed the epidemic's severity. This week, the Imperial College team estimated that there were a total of 4,000 cases (with the possibility of up to 9,700 cases in the worst-case scenario) by January 18, when the official tally was still at 62 cases.
Using a different statistical method, scientists at Northeastern University in Boston reckon that 5,900 were infected by January 23.
Despite the wide disparity in the figures, this new epidemic seems poised to eclipse the scale of the 2003 SARS epidemic, and is already well outside of the reach of simple control measures.
Hong Kong University virologist Guan Yi, who was part of the team that discovered the SARS virus, tells the Washington Post that the epidemic is so out of control now that "a bigger outbreak is certain." He said that even with a conservative estimate, the outbreak could be 10 times bigger than the SARS epidemic -- with a reach of more than 80,000 cases.
Speaking on background, other SARS veterans tell me there may already be "many thousands" of infected individuals in China.
Because authorities initially downplayed the seriousness of the outbreak instead of implementing swift control measures, people have traveled to and from Wuhan -- a major transportation hub with a population of 11 million people -- and unwittingly carried the virus with them.
Chinese authorities have shut down flights, ferries, highways, and trains leaving Wuhan, as well as public transportation within the city. Twelve other cities in China have issued travel restrictions in an unprecedented move to contain the virus just days before the Lunar New Year on January 25, which usually ushers the largest human migration on earth, with hundreds of millions of people traveling to see relatives.
Following my January 8 claim that the Chinese government was covering up a significant epidemic, pressure mounted from United Nations agencies, Ministries of Health worldwide and the scientific community. Finally, Wuhan provincial communist party chief Jiang Chaoliang, and his counterparts in neighboring districts, came under veiled criticism from President Xi Jinping who ordered Party leaders to "put people's safety and health as the top priority and take effective measures to curb the spread of the virus."
On January 20, China's National Health Commission designated the new disease a Class B infection, although it was treating the virus as a Class A infection -- meaning mandatory quarantines and community lockdowns may be used to stop its spread.
And the following day, the Central Political and Legal Affairs Commission posted on social media that, "Anyone who puts the face of politicians before the interests of the people will be the sinner of a millennium to the party and the people." The commentary also warned that "anyone who deliberately delays and hides the reporting of cases out of his or her own self-interest will be nailed on the pillar of shame for eternity" and stressed that transparency was the best defense against rumors and widespread fear.
Not surprisingly, reported numbers of cases from all over China jumped dramatically after Xi's speech and subsequent pressure from Beijing. This has confused matters considerably, making it impossible to tell how much of the soaring epidemic toll is due to a surge in actual new infections, versus release of case numbers that local authorities had been covering up.
Worse, despite calls for openness, SARS hero Dr. Zhong Nanshan, who was celebrated for his 2003 efforts, gave a televised interview on January 20 in which he warned that 14 healthcare workers were infected in Wuhan, the risk to medical personnel is acute, and severity of threat will rise if the virus mutates. Zhong, who had initially made several appearances on Chinese television, has not been featured on broadcasts in recent days, with some speculating that the government is now silencing him.
But Zhong's warning represented sound science. As the leading Chinese virology team wrote, after comparing the genetics and proteins of the new virus and SARS, "the Wuhan nCoV poses a significant public health risk for human transmission," because it -- like SARS -- has the ability to bind to a protein found on the surface of most human lung cells. "People also need to be reminded that risk and dynamic of cross-species or human-to-human transmission of coronaviruses are also affected by many other factors," like the host's immune response, the speed with which the viruses can multiply inside human lungs, and the potential mutations that might make the virus more virulent or transmissible.
And the following day, the Central Political and Legal Affairs Commission posted on social media that, "Anyone who puts the face of politicians before the interests of the people will be the sinner of a millennium to the party and the people." The commentary also warned that "anyone who deliberately delays and hides the reporting of cases out of his or her own self-interest will be nailed on the pillar of shame for eternity" and stressed that transparency was the best defense against rumors and widespread fear.
Not surprisingly, reported numbers of cases from all over China jumped dramatically after Xi's speech and subsequent pressure from Beijing. This has confused matters considerably, making it impossible to tell how much of the soaring epidemic toll is due to a surge in actual new infections, versus release of case numbers that local authorities had been covering up.
Worse, despite calls for openness, SARS hero Dr. Zhong Nanshan, who was celebrated for his 2003 efforts, gave a televised interview on January 20 in which he warned that 14 healthcare workers were infected in Wuhan, the risk to medical personnel is acute, and severity of threat will rise if the virus mutates. Zhong, who had initially made several appearances on Chinese television, has not been featured on broadcasts in recent days, with some speculating that the government is now silencing him.
But Zhong's warning represented sound science. As the leading Chinese virology team wrote, after comparing the genetics and proteins of the new virus and SARS, "the Wuhan nCoV poses a significant public health risk for human transmission," because it -- like SARS -- has the ability to bind to a protein found on the surface of most human lung cells. "People also need to be reminded that risk and dynamic of cross-species or human-to-human transmission of coronaviruses are also affected by many other factors," like the host's immune response, the speed with which the viruses can multiply inside human lungs, and the potential mutations that might make the virus more virulent or transmissible.
Regardless of how transparent Beijing may now become, what I witnessed tracking SARS across Hong Kong and China, and subsequent investigations of sites hit by the disease in Hanoi, Bangkok, Singapore, Toronto and Hong Kong augurs poorly for this new viral epidemic and China's ability to bring it to a rapid resolution.
While 17 years has brought significant improvements in virology, diagnostics development, international health regulations and the WHO, and we know more today about the nCoV2019 virus (as the Wuhan coronavirus is awkwardly dubbed) than we did one month into the SARS epidemic, there is no magic wand that can wave this highly dispersed, airborne-spread, human-to-human transmitting microbe away.
After the initial coverup, Beijing is now executing the playbook that ultimately stopped SARS. The city of Wuhan is now on lockdown and fever checkpoints are operating in most major transit hubs across the country while Lunar New Year celebrations have been canceled. Instant contagious quarantine 1,000-bed facilities are under construction, with one due to open next week outside Wuhan. One key step -- closing all live animal markets nationwide -- has not yet been implemented.
I discovered in 2003 that wildlife dealers and animal breeders sell their living creatures all over the country, so that an infected animal in one city's market may well have a counterpart from the same dealer, on sale in another market hundreds of miles away. It is not yet known what beast was the source of nCoV2019, though one study suggests, based on genetic analysis of the virus, that it came from a snake. The SARS virus was transmitted to restaurant workers who bought and slaughtered live civets -- raccoon-like animals in a Guangzhou live animal market, which I investigated before authorities shut it down.
Like the Guangzhou market, Wuhan's Huanan Wholesale Seafood Market sells a vast range of animals, including civets as well as other exotic wild animals. All live animal markets throughout China and neighboring Asian countries should be shut down immediately, and not reopen until the source of the nCoV2019 epidemic is identified. Until then, it should be assumed that any live animals sold in markets from Hanoi, Vietnam, to Ulan Bator, Mongolia, might be dangerous to hold, slaughter or consume.
To stop the SARS epidemic in 2003, governments, hospitals and public health authorities resorted to measures that mirrored infection control in the early 20th century, focusing on taking temperatures to find individuals with fevers, and then placing those people -- regardless of the causes of their febrile states -- in mandatory quarantine. Eventually, with the feverish souls separated from the rest of humanity, the virus stopped spreading. By June 2003 the Chinese government was able to declare victory over SARS, eight months after the virus first emerged.
While 17 years has brought significant improvements in virology, diagnostics development, international health regulations and the WHO, and we know more today about the nCoV2019 virus (as the Wuhan coronavirus is awkwardly dubbed) than we did one month into the SARS epidemic, there is no magic wand that can wave this highly dispersed, airborne-spread, human-to-human transmitting microbe away.
After the initial coverup, Beijing is now executing the playbook that ultimately stopped SARS. The city of Wuhan is now on lockdown and fever checkpoints are operating in most major transit hubs across the country while Lunar New Year celebrations have been canceled. Instant contagious quarantine 1,000-bed facilities are under construction, with one due to open next week outside Wuhan. One key step -- closing all live animal markets nationwide -- has not yet been implemented.
I discovered in 2003 that wildlife dealers and animal breeders sell their living creatures all over the country, so that an infected animal in one city's market may well have a counterpart from the same dealer, on sale in another market hundreds of miles away. It is not yet known what beast was the source of nCoV2019, though one study suggests, based on genetic analysis of the virus, that it came from a snake. The SARS virus was transmitted to restaurant workers who bought and slaughtered live civets -- raccoon-like animals in a Guangzhou live animal market, which I investigated before authorities shut it down.
Like the Guangzhou market, Wuhan's Huanan Wholesale Seafood Market sells a vast range of animals, including civets as well as other exotic wild animals. All live animal markets throughout China and neighboring Asian countries should be shut down immediately, and not reopen until the source of the nCoV2019 epidemic is identified. Until then, it should be assumed that any live animals sold in markets from Hanoi, Vietnam, to Ulan Bator, Mongolia, might be dangerous to hold, slaughter or consume.
To stop the SARS epidemic in 2003, governments, hospitals and public health authorities resorted to measures that mirrored infection control in the early 20th century, focusing on taking temperatures to find individuals with fevers, and then placing those people -- regardless of the causes of their febrile states -- in mandatory quarantine. Eventually, with the feverish souls separated from the rest of humanity, the virus stopped spreading. By June 2003 the Chinese government was able to declare victory over SARS, eight months after the virus first emerged.
Here is what it will take, then, to stop the Wuhan virus.
First, the flow of people who are infected has to stop and transportation across the entirety of China must be monitored or restricted. The Wuhan animal market from which nCoV2019 arose is located less than 0.5 miles from one of the city's train stations, where several high-speed rails stop. It must be assumed that people, and their live animals, walked that short distance earlier this month to take the trains -- possibly carrying the virus with them to cities across China.
A post from Wuhan Railway that has since been deleted said 300,000 people traveled out of Wuhan by train on Wednesday. It is imperative that the tough lockdown measures unfolding this week presage nationwide travel restrictions.
During the SARS epidemic, a brave military physician leaked medical documents to Time magazine, providing proof that SARS patients were secretly being treated in People's Liberation Army facilities in Beijing. Once word was out, I watched as tens of thousands of Beijing residents climbed onto trains, fleeing the city -- and taking SARS to every corner of the country.
After the exodus from Beijing in 2003, authorities erected fever check stations in every air, bus and train terminal in China, and placed policed health stations along the nation's highways. Fever-check stations were so abundant that I was typically tested 10 to 12 times a day in Beijing, and every 10 to 20 miles while driving on major highways.
The Chinese government has started erecting a network of fever stations in transit hubs, and I expect this will ramp up considerably over the coming week. Social media posts already show several photos and videos of officials erecting roadblocks, barricades, and traffic diversions to police-manned fever stations and similar measures reminiscent of what I witnessed in 2003.
Currently, family members of known nCoV2019 patients are tested for infection and placed under surveillance. Chinese authorities are already tracking hundreds of close contacts of known patients, and this will escalate radically over coming days. Apartment complexes and hotels that are known to have housed a nCoV2019-infected person will also be scoured.
First, the flow of people who are infected has to stop and transportation across the entirety of China must be monitored or restricted. The Wuhan animal market from which nCoV2019 arose is located less than 0.5 miles from one of the city's train stations, where several high-speed rails stop. It must be assumed that people, and their live animals, walked that short distance earlier this month to take the trains -- possibly carrying the virus with them to cities across China.
A post from Wuhan Railway that has since been deleted said 300,000 people traveled out of Wuhan by train on Wednesday. It is imperative that the tough lockdown measures unfolding this week presage nationwide travel restrictions.
During the SARS epidemic, a brave military physician leaked medical documents to Time magazine, providing proof that SARS patients were secretly being treated in People's Liberation Army facilities in Beijing. Once word was out, I watched as tens of thousands of Beijing residents climbed onto trains, fleeing the city -- and taking SARS to every corner of the country.
After the exodus from Beijing in 2003, authorities erected fever check stations in every air, bus and train terminal in China, and placed policed health stations along the nation's highways. Fever-check stations were so abundant that I was typically tested 10 to 12 times a day in Beijing, and every 10 to 20 miles while driving on major highways.
The Chinese government has started erecting a network of fever stations in transit hubs, and I expect this will ramp up considerably over the coming week. Social media posts already show several photos and videos of officials erecting roadblocks, barricades, and traffic diversions to police-manned fever stations and similar measures reminiscent of what I witnessed in 2003.
Currently, family members of known nCoV2019 patients are tested for infection and placed under surveillance. Chinese authorities are already tracking hundreds of close contacts of known patients, and this will escalate radically over coming days. Apartment complexes and hotels that are known to have housed a nCoV2019-infected person will also be scoured.
There must also be a safe place to quarantine people who are running temperatures. In 2003 I watched in frank astonishment as teams of Chinese workers erected entire hospitals -- complete with air filters, special sewage systems and electricity -- in just days, province-by-province. A similar effort is now underway in Wuhan.
By far the most important measures to stop the Wuhan coronavirus will be those related to hospitals and how well medical teams can contain the virus. Both MERS and SARS spread like wildfire through unprepared medical facilities, regardless of the comparative wealth and sophistication of the hospitals. Most of the SARS cases in Hong Kong went to two hospitals: one had just a single healthcare worker infected, while the other suffered terrible losses in both health workers and patients who were being treated for other medical ailments.
The key difference? The teams in the better hospital had years of infection control training, which taught staff to work in teams and make sure that any contaminated protective gear was safely removed without contact with the skin, face, eyes or hands.
Over the last few days, many Chinese social media users have posted dramatic videos and photos of over-crowded hospital emergency room facilities, in which frantic patients and family members are crammed together and healthcare workers are hard-pressed to control the influx, as the infectious spread of the virus is surely occurring. In the SARS epidemic, hospitals eventually realized the need to set up fever check stations outside the facilities, screening would-be patients, and ushering febrile individuals into an entry separate from other hospital admissions.
In Toronto and Singapore, which have remarkably good healthcare systems and state-of-the-art facilities, hospital workers struggled mightily to stop spread of SARS, and healthcare workers who were infected died. In some of my discussions with physicians and nurses that went through the SARS nightmares, I have learned that the wealthier facilities were, perhaps, at greater risk because they had more equipment and procedures to apply to patients, including intubation and lavage, which was used to remove fluids from the lungs that built up in response to infection.
By far the most important measures to stop the Wuhan coronavirus will be those related to hospitals and how well medical teams can contain the virus. Both MERS and SARS spread like wildfire through unprepared medical facilities, regardless of the comparative wealth and sophistication of the hospitals. Most of the SARS cases in Hong Kong went to two hospitals: one had just a single healthcare worker infected, while the other suffered terrible losses in both health workers and patients who were being treated for other medical ailments.
The key difference? The teams in the better hospital had years of infection control training, which taught staff to work in teams and make sure that any contaminated protective gear was safely removed without contact with the skin, face, eyes or hands.
Over the last few days, many Chinese social media users have posted dramatic videos and photos of over-crowded hospital emergency room facilities, in which frantic patients and family members are crammed together and healthcare workers are hard-pressed to control the influx, as the infectious spread of the virus is surely occurring. In the SARS epidemic, hospitals eventually realized the need to set up fever check stations outside the facilities, screening would-be patients, and ushering febrile individuals into an entry separate from other hospital admissions.
In Toronto and Singapore, which have remarkably good healthcare systems and state-of-the-art facilities, hospital workers struggled mightily to stop spread of SARS, and healthcare workers who were infected died. In some of my discussions with physicians and nurses that went through the SARS nightmares, I have learned that the wealthier facilities were, perhaps, at greater risk because they had more equipment and procedures to apply to patients, including intubation and lavage, which was used to remove fluids from the lungs that built up in response to infection.
When SARS hit Hanoi, patients were originally taken to the prestigious French Hospital, where modern interventions were used, but the virus readily spread, taking the lives of doctors and nurses. When patients were moved to the far less sophisticated Bach Mai Hospital, which lacked some of the more advanced equipment, windows were open due to a lack of air conditioning.
According to some of the doctors, this slowed the spread of the virus by preventing it from adhering to surfaces and people in the hospital.
China is likely to take a serious economic hit as a result of the nCoV2019 virus. The SARS epidemic cost the global economy $54 billion, according to a World Bank estimate, and the Wuhan coronavirus is likely to affect Chinese tourism and trade. Seventeen years after SARS, China -- now the second largest economy in the world -- is likely to experience a higher scale of costs and burdens to execute nationwide containment strategy. But Beijing has no choice. The virus is already everywhere.
China is likely to take a serious economic hit as a result of the nCoV2019 virus. The SARS epidemic cost the global economy $54 billion, according to a World Bank estimate, and the Wuhan coronavirus is likely to affect Chinese tourism and trade. Seventeen years after SARS, China -- now the second largest economy in the world -- is likely to experience a higher scale of costs and burdens to execute nationwide containment strategy. But Beijing has no choice. The virus is already everywhere.
Credit :
Ertugrul GaziThursday, January 23, 2020
မြန်မာနိုင်ငံကို အရေးပေါ် ကြားဖြတ်တားဆီးမိန့် ဆောင်ရွက်ဖို့ ICJ ဆုံးဖြတ်
မြန်မာနိုင်ငံကို အရေးပေါ် ကြားဖြတ်တားဆီးမိန့် ဆောင်ရွက်ဖို့ ICJ ဆုံးဖြတ်
ဂမ်ဘီယာနိုင်ငံရဲ့ တင်ပြချက်တွေက အကျိုးအကြောင်း ဆီလျော် ဆက်စပ်နေတာကြောင့် မြန်မာနိုင်ငံအနေနဲ့ အရေးပေါ်ကြားဖြတ်အစီအစဉ် လုပ်ဆောင်ပေးဖို့ အပြည်ပြည်ဆိုင်ရာ တရားရုံးက ဒီကနေ့ဇန်နဝါရီ (၂၃) မှာ ဆုံးဖြတ်လိုက်ပါတယ်။
ရခိုင်ပြည်နယ်မြောက်ပိုင်းဖြစ်ပွားခဲ့တဲ့ ပဋိပက္ခတွေမှာ ဒုက္ခသည်မွတ်ဆလင်တွေ ရဲ့ အခွင့်အရေးတွေနဲ့ သတ်ဖြတ်ခံရတာတွေဟာ ပြန်ပြင်လို့မရတော့တဲ့ ဆုံးရှုူံးမှုတွေဖြစ်ခဲ့ တာကြောင့် မြန်မာနိုင်ငံအနေနဲ့ ကြားဖြတ်အစီအစဉ်တွေ ဆောင်ရွက်ပေးဖို့ တရားရုံး က ဆုံးဖြတ်ခဲ့တာဖြစ်တယ်လို့ တရားသူကြီးက ပြောပါတယ်။ ဒါ့အပြင် ရခိုင်ပြည်နယ်မြောက်ပိုင်းမ ှာ ဖြစ်ပွားနေတဲ့ ပဋိပက္ခတွေဟာ နောက်ထပ်အန္တရာယ်တွေ မကျရောက်လာနိုင်ဖို့ အရေးတကြီး လိုအပ်နေတာကြောင့်လည်း အခုလိုဆုံးဖြတ်ခဲ့တာဖြစ်တယ် လို့ တရားရုံးက ပြောပါတယ်။
မြန်မာနိုင်ငံက တောင်းဆိုတဲ့ ဂမ်ဘီယာက စွဲထားတဲ့ အမှုကို ပယ်ချဖို့နဲ့ ကြားဖြတ်စီမံချက် ကို မထုတ်ဖို့ ဆိုတဲ့ အချက် (၂) ချက်လုံး ကိုတော့ တရားရုံးက ပယ်ချခဲ့ပါတယ်။
အခုလို ကြားဖြတ်အစီအမံ ချမှတ်လိုက်ပြီး မြန်မာနိုင်ငံအနေနဲ့ ဂမ်ဘီယာကတောင်းဆို ခဲ့တဲ့ အချက် (၆) ချက် ကနေ (၄)ခု ကို ဆောင်ရွက်ပေးဖို့ တရားရုံးက ဒီကနေ့ ဆုံးဖြတ်လိုက်ပါတယ်။
အဲ့ဒီအချက် (၄) ချက်အရ မြန်မာနိုင်ငံအနေနဲ့ Genocide Convention နဲ့ အညီ မွတ်ဆလင်ဒုက္ခသည်တွေ အတွက် အစီအမံတွေ ဆောင်ရွက်ပေးဖို့၊ တပ်မတော်၊ လက်နက်ကိုင်တပ်ဖွဲ့တွေ နဲ့ တစ်ခြားပုဂ္ဂိုလ်အဖွဲ့အစည်း တွေ အနေနဲ့ ဂျီနိုဆိုက်ဖြစ်စေနိုင်တာတွေကို မကျူးလွန်ဖို့၊ အထောက်အထားတွေ မဖျက်ဆီးဖို့၊ နောက်ပြီး ၄ လ တစ်ခါအစီရင်ခံဖို့ နဲ့ စီရင်ချက်အမိန့် မချခင်အထိ (၆)လ တစ်ခါ အစီရင်ခံဖို့ တရားရုံးက ဆုံးဖြတ်ခဲ့ပါတယ်။
ရခိုင်ပြည်နယ်မြောက်ပိုင်းဖြစ်ပွားခဲ့တဲ့ ပဋိပက္ခတွေမှာ ဒုက္ခသည်မွတ်ဆလင်တွေ ရဲ့ အခွင့်အရေးတွေနဲ့ သတ်ဖြတ်ခံရတာတွေဟာ ပြန်ပြင်လို့မရတော့တဲ့ ဆုံးရှုူံးမှုတွေဖြစ်ခဲ့ တာကြောင့် မြန်မာနိုင်ငံအနေနဲ့ ကြားဖြတ်အစီအစဉ်တွေ ဆောင်ရွက်ပေးဖို့ တရားရုံး က ဆုံးဖြတ်ခဲ့တာဖြစ်တယ်လို့ တရားသူကြီးက ပြောပါတယ်။ ဒါ့အပြင် ရခိုင်ပြည်နယ်မြောက်ပိုင်းမ
မြန်မာနိုင်ငံက တောင်းဆိုတဲ့ ဂမ်ဘီယာက စွဲထားတဲ့ အမှုကို ပယ်ချဖို့နဲ့ ကြားဖြတ်စီမံချက် ကို မထုတ်ဖို့ ဆိုတဲ့ အချက် (၂) ချက်လုံး ကိုတော့ တရားရုံးက ပယ်ချခဲ့ပါတယ်။
အခုလို ကြားဖြတ်အစီအမံ ချမှတ်လိုက်ပြီး မြန်မာနိုင်ငံအနေနဲ့ ဂမ်ဘီယာကတောင်းဆို ခဲ့တဲ့ အချက် (၆) ချက် ကနေ (၄)ခု ကို ဆောင်ရွက်ပေးဖို့ တရားရုံးက ဒီကနေ့ ဆုံးဖြတ်လိုက်ပါတယ်။
အဲ့ဒီအချက် (၄) ချက်အရ မြန်မာနိုင်ငံအနေနဲ့ Genocide Convention နဲ့ အညီ မွတ်ဆလင်ဒုက္ခသည်တွေ အတွက် အစီအမံတွေ ဆောင်ရွက်ပေးဖို့၊ တပ်မတော်၊ လက်နက်ကိုင်တပ်ဖွဲ့တွေ နဲ့ တစ်ခြားပုဂ္ဂိုလ်အဖွဲ့အစည်း
Monday, January 20, 2020
ရှမ်းပြည်နယ်ဝန်ကြီးချုပ်မှ ပေးအပ်ချီးမြှင့်သည့် လူမှုထူးချွန်ဆုတွင် တာချီလိတ်နာရေးကူညီမှုအသင်း ပါဝင်ရှမ်းပြည်နယ်ဝန်ကြီးချုပ်မှ ပေးအပ်ချီးမြှင့်သည့် လူမှုထူးချွန်ဆု(၁၄)ဆုတွင် မြန်မာ - ထိုင်းနယ်စပ်ဒေသမှ တာချီလိတ်နာရေးကူညီမှုအသင်း က လူမှုထူးချွန်ဆု(တတိယအဆင့်)တွင် ပါဝင်ကြောင်း ၂၀၂၀ခုနှစ် ဇန်နဝါရီလ(၇)ရက်နေ့ ရက်စွဲဖြင့် ထုတ်ပြန်သည့် ကြော်ငြာစာအရ သိရသည်။
လူမှုထူးချွန်ဆု(ပထမအဆင့်)တွင် ရှမ်းပြည်နယ်(မြောက်ပိုင်း) လားရှိုးမြို့မှ သီရိမင်္ဂလာမန်ဆူရှမ်းကျောင်းတိုက် ဆရာတော် ဘဒ္ဒန္တပုညနန္ဒ၊ လားရှိုးလူငယ်များ လူမှုကူညီရေးအသင်း ဥက္ကဌ ဦးထွန်းမြင့်၊ ဂီတပညာရှင် စိုင်းထီဆိုင်၊ ဒေါက်တာ စိုင်းခမ်းလိတ် နှင့် စိုင်းဆိုင်မောဝ် တို့ ရရှိသည်။
လူမှုထူးချွန်ဆု(ဒုတိယအဆင့်)တွင် ရှမ်းပြည်နယ်(မြောက်ပိုင်း) ကိုးကန့်ကိုယ်ပိုင်အုပ်ချုပ်ခွင့်ရဒေသဦးစီးအဖွဲ့မှ အဖွဲ့ဝင် ဖူလီလိုက်ကုမ္ပဏီအုပ်စု ဥက္ကဌ သီရိသုဓမ္မမဏိဇောတဓရ ဦးလီကျိန်းချန်(ခ) ဦးလျိုအားပေါက် နှင့် ဖူလီလိုက်ကုမ္ပဏီအုပ်စု ဦးဆောင်ညွှန်ကြားရေးမှူး သီရိသုဓမ္မမဏိဇောတဓရ ဦးမောင်မောင်တို့ ရရှိသည်။
လူမှုထူးချွန်ဆု(တတိယအဆင့်)ရရှိသည့် ရှမ်းပြည်နယ်အတွင်းမှ လူမှုရေးအသင်းအဖွဲ့အနေ့ဖြင့် ရှမ်းပြည်နယ်(အရှေ့ပိုင်း) တာချီလိတ်မြို့မှ တာချီလိတ်နာရေးကူညီမှုအသင်း၊ ရှမ်းပြည်နယ်(တောင်ပိုင်း) နမ့်စန်မြို့မှ ကရုဏာရှင်လူမှုကူညီရေးအသင်း၊ ရှမ်းပြည်နယ်(မြောက်ပိုင်း) လားရှိုးမြို့မှ ပေးသောလက် စေတနာရှင် သွေး နှင့် လူမှုကူညီရေးအသင်း တို့ ရရှိသည်။
လူမှုထူးချွန်ဆု(တတိယအဆင့်)တွင် လူတစ်ဦးတစ်ယောက်ချင်းနှင့်အုပ်စုအနေဖြင့် ရှမ်းပြည်နယ်(မြောက်ပိုင်း) သီပေါမြို့မှ ဒေါက်တာနန္ဒဝင်း ဦးဆောင်သော သီပေါကျန်းမာရေးမိသားစု၊ လောက်ကိုင်မြို့မှ ကိုးကန့်ကိုယ်ပိုင်အုပ်ချုပ်ခွင့်ရဒေသဦးစီးအဖွဲ့မှ အဖွဲ့ဝင် ဦးစန်းလွင်(ခ)ထင်ရှောက်ဝမ်၊ ရှမ်းပြည်နယ်(တောင်ပိုင်း) တောင်ကြီးမြို့မှ မောင်ဘုန်းမြင့်ကျော် နှင့် ရှမ်းပြည်နယ်(အရှေ့ပိုင်း) ကျိုင်းတုံမြို့မှ နောင်တုံကုမ္ပဏီ မန်းနေဂျင်းဒါရိုက်တာ ဦးစိုင်းတစ်အောင် တို့ ရရှိသည်။
"အခုလို ဆုရရှိတဲ့အတွက် ဝမ်းသာပါတယ်။ တာချီလိတ်က သက်ဆိုင်ရာ လူကြီးတွေရော ဌာနတွေရော ကျေးဇူးတင်ပါတယ်။ ဆုကတော့ (၂)လပိုင်း (၇)ရက်နေ့ တောင်ကြီးမှာ သွားရောက် လက်ခံယူရမှာပါ"ဟု တာချီလိတ်နာရေးကူညီမှုအသင်း ဥက္ကဌ ဦးလှမိုးက တာချီလိတ်သတင်းအေဂျင်စီသို့ ဇန်နဝါရီလ(၁၇)ရက်နေ့တွင် ပြောသည်။
ရှမ်းပြည်နယ်ဝန်ကြီးချုပ်က စီမံထူးချွန်ဆု၊ လုံခြုံရေးနှင့်တရားဥပဒေစိုးမိုးရေးဆိုင်ရာထူးချွန်ဆု၊ စီးပွားထူးချွန်ဆု၊ စိုက်ပျိုးထူးချွန်ဆု၊ မွေးမြူထူးချွန်ဆု၊ သဘာဝပတ်ဝန်းကျင်ထိန်းသိမ်းရေးထူးချွန်ဆု နှင့် လူမှုထူးချွန်ဆု စုစုပေါင်း(၃၉)ဦးအား ပေးအပ်ချီးမြှင့်ကြောင်း ၂၀၂၀ခုနှစ် ဇန်နဝါရီလ(၇)ရက်နေ့ ရက်စွဲဖြင့် ထုတ်ပြန်သည့် ကြော်ငြာထားခြင်း ဖြစ်သည်။
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