COVID'19 ALERT

  • Wash your hands often with soap and water for at least 20 seconds
  • If soap and water are not available, use an alcohol-based hand sanitiser
  • Avoid touching your eyes, nose and mouth
  • Cough or sneeze into the bend of your arm
  • Avoid touching surfaces people touch often
  • Instead of a handshake, give a friendly wave or elbow bump
  • Use any necessary personal protective equipment, as directed.

What is COVID'19 –and what is the risk of mortality?



Why do I avoid being compromised by myself and others?
Clean your hands for at least 20 seconds of soap and water, and do so regularly, like when you get home or at work. When soap and water are not available, using the hand sanitiser spray. Stop getting your nose hit. Cough or sneeze into your elbow's tissue or crook (not your hand) and place the tissues in the bin straight.

What can you say the difference between flu and Covid-19?
The coronavirus epidemic reached the northern hemisphere in the midst of the flu season and thus physicians may fail to differentiate between the two–the difference of symptoms possibly led to the poor diagnosis of infectious outbreaks in several nations, including Italy.
Typical flu signs that typically develop rapidly involve elevated temperature, sore throat, stomach aches, fatigue, shivering, runny or stuffy nose, tiredness, and, more rarely, vomiting and diarrhea. Experts continue to work to identify the full spectrum of signs and seriousness ofCovid-19, but early tests of hospitalized patients showed that nearly half of them experienced fever and dry cough,

In the United Kingdom the medical recommendation is now that someone who has a fresh recurrent cough or elevated fever will always rest at home for 14 days, staying away from everyone. That extends to everyone, regardless of whether they have traveled abroad.
For details, you can visit the dedicated coronavirus NHS 111 website. If you're feeling worse, or whether the problems last more than seven days, contact NHS 111. If they are in care, individuals can no longer get checked for the infection.

This is typically around 1 per cent or a little less. Far higher numbers have been floating around, but one of those who think it would appear to be 1 percent or less is the chief medical officer Chris Whitty. Director-General of the World Health Organisation, Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, spoke of 3.4 per cent, but his statistic was determined by measuring the amount of fatalities by the number of cases officially reported.
We recognize that there are even more minor cases that don't go to hospital and are not reported, which will dramatically lower the death rate.


Deaths are higher among the aged, with relatively small numbers in younger adults, but it is believed that medical workers who handle patients and get subjected to a number of infections are at greater risk. Yet 90 per cent will rebound only in the over-80s.

Comments