The document discusses COVID-19, including that it is caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus and not bacteria. Common symptoms include fever, cough, and difficulty breathing. It can spread through respiratory droplets from infected individuals and by touching contaminated surfaces. Governments are working to limit the spread and there is currently no immunity to the virus.
The document discusses COVID-19, including that it is caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus and not bacteria. Common symptoms include fever, cough, and difficulty breathing. It can spread through respiratory droplets from infected individuals and by touching contaminated surfaces. Governments are working to limit the spread and there is currently no immunity to the virus.
The document discusses COVID-19, including that it is caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus and not bacteria. Common symptoms include fever, cough, and difficulty breathing. It can spread through respiratory droplets from infected individuals and by touching contaminated surfaces. Governments are working to limit the spread and there is currently no immunity to the virus.
The document discusses COVID-19, including that it is caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus and not bacteria. Common symptoms include fever, cough, and difficulty breathing. It can spread through respiratory droplets from infected individuals and by touching contaminated surfaces. Governments are working to limit the spread and there is currently no immunity to the virus.
Heavily shaken by the outbreak of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), many of
us are currently thinking about the need to fight not only the current COVID-19 pandemic but also the related infodemic. Infodemic is a situation wherein information and news started to become random or unreliable which might be the result of flooding news and information found on the internet platforms. Questions such as what is Covid-19, its symptoms, causes, is it airborne or not, and such are the ones usually asked. So what is Covid-19? There are increasing indications that the world will look different after the crisis and that globalization will be questioned in many areas because it is automatic that COVID-19 crisis would mark a turning point. COVID-19 is caused by infection with the most common symptoms such as fever, tiredness, dry cough, and some are also aches and pains, nasal congestion, runny nose, sore throat or diarrhea. When symptoms are gradually becoming more damaging most patients recover without needing any special treatment, and only around 1 of 6 patients manifest with difficulty breathing and become seriously ill. In addition, people who have existing medical conditions and are older have a higher risk of serious illness from COVID-19, and the risk increases with age. This time, let's talk about whether Covid-19 is caused by viruses or bacteria. Publicly and scientifically speaking, Covid-19 is caused by a virus and not by a bacteria and its announced name is “severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2" or SARS-CoV-2. The Covid-19 outbreak began and was first detected in Wuhan, China in the 12th month of the year 2019, since then the virus spread to all continents (except Antarctica). The virus that causes COVID-19 is in a family of viruses called Coronaviridae plus viruses cannot be treated with antibiotics. They get their name, “corona,” from the many crown-like spikes on the surface of the virus. 13 But how did CoronaVirus spread from person to person? Many experts believe that the new strain of Coronavirus likely originated in bats or pangolins and it can be transmitted through eating the infected animal's flesh. Today, we have the ECQ and GCQ, we have the protocols to follow when going outside to decrease the rate of transmissions. Virus travels in small respiratory droplets that linger in the air for minutes to hours from an infected person who is more than six feet away or has since left the space. What more if you have direct contact to the skin of the infected person, right? Viruses can be in the form of coughs, sneezes, talks, sings or breathes, yet even though this way of transmission has the least possibility of spreading, by touching surfaces that the virus has landed on, then touching your eyes, mouth, or nose before washing your hands you could also receive and have the said virus. In times of deep uncertainty, science is asked to look to the future and to flank a rational discourse about how to react to the current global crisis, and therefore now better cope with other tantamount global challenges such as the climate change. Governments, health agencies, researchers and healthcare providers are also working together to develop policies and procedures to limit the spread of this virus both globally and from individual to individual. There is no "immunity" in the pandemic that we are experiencing because whether you have been or not, we should all be careful because good health is one of the necessities of life, it may not be seen or touched, but it can be felt. Coronavirus cannot choose who to harm and not, and it is also better to be careful than to be sorry. As people say, "Repentance is always late" (Nasa huli ang pagsisisi). Thus, Covid-19 is a virus, infections, serious, contagious, so we must all be CAREFUL.