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@jlh1182 | 12 April 19 | |
Second is heat- fire, raising the temperature of an item over 75 degrees will kill bacterial life, virus however can sometimes survive by shelling up so heat needs a chemical agent..
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@jlh1182 | 12 April 19 | |
3 and applicable to 2 is salt, a natural antibacterial product, so applying heat with salt by maybe boiling salt water can sterilise an item..
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@jlh1182 | 12 April 19 | |
With these three methods we can begin a mirror operation of both camps infected and uninfected, set up an area that everything must pass through and become sterilised.. I'm thinking mostly of items firstly, things people handle, stop that transmission to begin with.. the rate of infection will begin to stabilize..
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@jlh1182 | 12 April 19 | |
I believe that where the infection comes from no known quarter the matter is being provoked by one or more persons, deliberately infecting a population.. not all things should be given the touch of doubt and some things should be insisted upon..
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@mok214 | 13 June 19 | |
Nearly 1,400 people have died in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Dr Jeremy Farrar, the director of the Wellcome Trust, said the epidemic was the worst since that of 2013-16 and has showed no sign of stopping. A five-year-old boy has also died in neighbouring Uganda, the first case of Ebola reported in the country. The Ugandan government is now reporting seven other suspected cases of the virus. In a statement, Dr Farrar said the spread was tragic but unfortunately not surprising. He warned that more cases were expected, and a full national and international response would be needed to protect lives. The DRC should not have to face this alone, he said. Since the first case of Ebola in the DRC last August, nearly 1,400 people have died - around 70 of all those infected. The outbreak is the second-largest in the history of the disease, with a significant spike in new cases in recent weeks. Only once before has an outbreak continued to grow more than eight months after it began - that was the epidemic in West Africa between 2013-16, which killed 11,310 people. |
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@mikeymk | 13 June 19 | |
With any luck it'll take Slago. Hey, only joking. |
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@mok214 | 22 January 20 | |
The World Health Organization is holding an emergency session to decide whether or not an outbreak of pneumonia likely caused by a new strain of coronavirus in China will constitute a global emergency. The meeting started at WHO headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland on Wednesday. More than 20 experts and officials are attending the meeting, including delegates from China, Japan and the United States. They will receive the latest reports from affected areas via a video link before determining whether the outbreak amounts to a public health emergency of international concern. The number of pneumonia cases likely caused by the new coronavirus has been growing mainly in the city of Wuhan in China's province of Hubei. Infections have also been confirmed in Japan, the US, and other parts of the world. Once the outbreak is declared as an emergency, the WHO will likely advise countries to take tighter quarantine measures and other steps to prevent any further spread of the disease. The WHO declared a public health emergency of international concern on several occasions, including the 2009 swine flu pandemic and last year's Ebola epidemic in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. |
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@ufohunter | 22 January 20 | |
China also had a plague scare last year.
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@propidol | 22 January 20 | |
I bet they're all getting on planes and just coughing at people.
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@mok214 | 23 January 20 | |
Well, it turns out tge celebrations for Chinese New Year are being cancelled all over the globe. And there is no doubt now that local Chinese politicians and doctors were covering up how many people were treated for this Coronavirus. Notice how the numbers have climbed since the Chinese Premier announced that any official covering this up would be hanged from the Pillar of Shame.
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