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World Pandemic called The Covid-19 (Corona Virus)

Assallamualaikum wr.wb, Good Evening everyone and Happy New Year (I know is too late, but i have many time during work from home (my next post), so i want to write about opening 2020.. The Public is focus about one cased called Covid-19, what is that ? The Wildlife Trade and Human Disease (sources: https://www.scientificamerican.com/podcast/episode/covid-19-the-wildlife-trade-and-human-disease/)

let be more specific about that .. but wait before i continue writing about that, let me say my respectful and my deepest condolances word for a brave Doctor from China who brave enough warn about coronavirus before he dying from disease, who has been hailed as a hero, Dr. Li Weinliang, 34 years, died in Wuhan after contracting the virus while treating a patient, Rest In Peace Doctor :')


 Rest In Peace Good Doctor :')
and
 Dr. Handoko who still give his dedication as a Doctor to treat Covid-19 patient at his 80, and now he at ICU
Get Well Soon Dr. Handoko
and there is a good news (updated 30 March 2020) Dr. Handoko is recovered 
and health now. God Bless Him :)


Indonesia Doctor who work at West Java Bogor infected covid-19 when treat patient, 
Rest In Peace Doctor Djoko

Doctor from Indonesia at RS Premierre Bintaro. Rest In Peace Doctor Hadio

Rest In Peace Doctor Bambang


Rest In Peace Doctor Iwan


RIP Dr. Bayu and Dr.Exsenveny 



RIP Dr. Efrizal and Dr. Ratih

What a great loss :( 

Christian Walzer, executive director of global health at the Wildlife Conservation Society, talks about how the wildlife trade, especially for human consumption, can lead to disease outbreaks.
This is another in our series of coronavirus episodes of Scientific American’s Science Talk, posted on March 19, 2020.
In early March, the prime minister of Vietnam directed the government to draft a directive to prohibit wildlife trade and consumption, to be submitted to him by April 1, 2020. In February China took similar actions.
To find out more about the wildlife trade and its relationship to the current coronavirus outbreak.

The situation 21st March 2020 



Inalillahi wa inna lillahi rojiun..

I must be in Thailand and malaysia at my birthday 25 February, but i cancelled all my holiday plan because of corona outbreak. I didn't get any refund from my travel agent and hotel :( (sorry about my story)

2020 is really hard year from the beginning, we are survive from all the thing, Pray For this:
Australian Bushfires
US killing Qassem Soleimani and Iranian retaliation
Iran downs Ukrainian plane, plane crash
Earthquake in Indonesia, Flood in Jakarta
Trump impeachment
Russian PM resigns
New strand of coronavirus, Wuhan Corona Virus Outbreak and around world
Volcano eruption in Philippines
Earthquake in Turkey
Avalanche in Kashmir
Accident speed boat at National of Sebangau Forest, Indonesia.


I hope everyone can stay safe and this pandemic ended soon. God Bless you all..
Don't Forget to Take Responsibility, Once you have calmed down a bit and let go of the things you can’t control anyway, the next step is that you take responsibility for what you can do. This includes taking responsibility for everything you can do to not get or spread the virus such as washing hands, keeping a distance and staying at home. But it also includes taking responsibility for your own mental response. You can only make further progress if you accept that there is nothing and no one else to blame and that you are the only one responsible.
It started from YOU..

David Quammen talks about his latest book, Spillover: Animal Infections and the Next Human Pandemic. From his Web site: "The next big and murderous human pandemic, the one that kills us in millions, will be caused by a new disease--new to humans, anyway. The bug that's responsible will be strange, unfamiliar, but it won't come from outer space. Odds are that the killer pathogen--most likely a virus--will spill over into humans from a nonhuman animal"
(sources: conversation David Quammen)


I alluded that at the beginning of this book. I say that predators are big animals that eat their prey from the outside and pathogens are little animals that eat their prey from the inside. So there's a parallel there. And I would say the other parallel is, both in Monster of God and in the Song of the Dodo, I was essentially writing about ecology and evolutionary biology—to some extent about the history of those sciences—with a lot field reporting, a lot of outdoor adventures; and in this book, there's a lot of molecular biology, molecular phylogenetics and things like that in it which took me wonderfully outside my comfort zone, but basically it's a book about the ecology and evolutionary biology of scary viruses.
I'd say a couple of reasons. People like horror stories, people like scary things, people like drama, tragedy is compelling, and the world of infectious disease, especially these emerging viral infectious diseases, have all that. They are tragic, they are dramatic, they are horrific, they are scary, they involve human stories. So all that was interesting to me, and [the] science was interesting to me; and then there's the fact that it takes the reader back, and the writer back, to one of those old Darwinian truths—I say this in the book also—that we humans are a kind of animal. So the notion of animal diseases passing into humans is a little bit—what's the word, redundant, tautological? If I'm being really precise, I'd say nonhuman animals spilling their pathogens over in[to] humans. But the basic point is the connectedness between humans and the rest of the natural world, humans and other species; we are inextricably, irrevocably interconnected with other species and one of the ways we are interconnected is by sharing their diseases.
They protect themselves rationally. They wear goggles and respirator masks and rubber boots and tyvek suits in some cases, but you can't protect yourself completely. I talked to one young Congolese doctor, when we were out in the forest, trying to get blood samples from gorillas to look for Ebola antibodies in an area where the gorilla population had been devastated by Ebola—because Ebola affects gorillas and chimps as well as human—and his job is to go out when there is a chimp or gorilla found dead in the forest, and to take tissue samples, to see if it's hot with Ebola. Great, okay, so he dresses up in his tyvek suit, in his hood, in his couple of layers of rubber gloves and he walks up to a chimp that has been rotting for four or five days on the forest floor, and he sticks his scalpel into it to take a tissue sample. Lot of things can go wrong with that. He told me about one time when he did that and it was covered with bees, this chimp carcass, and he reached down to cut a tissue sample, and the bees came running up his arms and he was wearing a vented hood, and they came in under the hood, down across his naked body, and they're stinging him, and he's thinking, "Okay, great, now I've got bees inside my suit that have just been on a chimp carcass that may be hot with Ebola, and they're stinging me." "Why do you do this?" I said to him. He said, "Because I really love my job." Those people are heroes; they're cool.
That's right. There're 7 billion of us now on the planet, 7 billion humans, probably heading towards 9 billion in the next 50 or 80 years. There has never been a single species of large body of vertebrate animal on this planet as abundant as we are now. We know that from the paleontological record. It's an unprecedented situation. In ecological terms, it's an outbreak of population. We humans are an outbreak population because we have so exploded in terms of our numbers, in terms of our total mass, in terms of the amount of resources that we irrigate; we're cutting our way through the tropical forests, building timber camps, building villages, killing animals and eating them, disrupting relationships between reservoir hosts and the viruses and other microbes that live within them. I say in the book, "You shake a tree, and things fall out." And that's one of the reasons why there's a drumbeat of increasing cases of these emerging diseases, particularly viruses. We're driving a lot of species towards extinction or simply killing individuals and driving populations down, and we're offering ourselves as alternative hosts. Now viruses don't have intentions. They don't make choices. But given opportunities, they will spill over into new hosts. And when they spill over into humans, they've won the jackpot, they've won the sweepstakes. The way the pandemic strain of HIV won the sweepstakes back there in the early 20th century when it spilled from a chimpanzee, an animal that unfortunately is declining in population, into a human, an animal that's increasing in population; it was a great career move for that virus.


Thank You Doctor Nurse and all the team , a Hero





The Doctor at Ministry Of Forestry 



Feel the symptom? ask the doctor here :
Consultation with alodokter about covid-19

Adrs
andinadyahratnasari@icloud.com
andinadyahratnasari@gmail.com





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