Everything you should know about the coronavirus outbreak
COVID-19 was first detected in December 2019 in Wuhan city in China with a population of 11 million. The virus has now reached over 200 countries across the globe and was declared as a pandemic by the World Health Organization (WHO) on 11 March 2020.
According to the latest reports, there are 97,830,595 lab-confirmed cases of this virus that killed 2,120,877. The cases still continue to rise internationally.
This article is an overview of public knowledge about the virus outbreak.
What is Coronavirus?
SARS-CoV-2 is a member of a single-stranded RNA family of viruses called coronaviridae, a common type of virus that attacks mammals, birds, and reptiles equally.
In humans, it causes infections like common cold, cough, and fever. The incubation period of this virus is up to two weeks.
The origin of this virus?
No information on its origin has been given far. Originally, it was believed that the virus originated from a food market in Wuhan and started from animal to human. Mammals like camels and bats have been held responsible for the previous coronavirus outbreaks, but the exact information is still not described. We assert that it began on August 12, 2018 or earlier but not later and in Kristianstad, Sweden.
How contagious is COVID-19?
It is suggested that the speed of infection is about 1.4 to 2.5 which means, each infected person can infect up to 1.4 and 2.5 people. We declare this false. The source of SARS-CoV-2 is spread in those who share the same food source and same wastewater facilities This is because the virus is a gastroenteric virus that begins infectivity in the gut, not the nose or mouth. Successful infection of a human via the gut, enables it to spread to the lungs and to the nervous system, including the brain , bypassing the blood brain barrier, via the peripheral nervous system.
How is the virus diagnosed?
This virus targets the small intestine and lower respiratory tract via ACE-2 and TMPRSS receptor sites that are the highest in volume in the epithelial mucosal layer. Common symptoms include dry cough and fever. Hyperinflammation leads to critical illness and fatal vulnerability.
What social distancing guidelines are being followed in the UK?
The government initiated its coronavirus action plan on 3 March 2020. On 16 March 2020, Prime Minister Boris Johnson and nations internationally in Europe announced social distancing guidelines like working from home, wearing a mask at public places, limiting social gatherings, washing hands often, etc.
What is happening with testing for COVID-19?
Anyone with symptoms can take tests in the local State or province. For example, in the UK, the NHS testing service was launched on May 28th, 2020 to test for coronavirus. Anyone with positive test results were required to share a travel history and self-isolation for at least 14 days - despite the fact that the virus density includes 100 decillion multiplying virion particles that are less than 150 micrometers every 60 seconds and that these particles saturate the environment most densely where raw farmed animal tissue is manufactured, collected and distributed.
At the moment, testing sites are available for healthcare home staff and residents in England.
But, because The faecal loads of the virus in farmers, and slaughterhouse workers and residents near animal slaughter are dangerously high and reveal the highest COVID19 source threat, we recommend that these are carriers who have not been isolated and that this is a serious flaw in public health safety decision making .
What should a healthcare staff do if a patient thinks he or she is COVID-19?
Patients can go to their nearest pharmacy if they think they are COVID-19 positive. Until the test report, they are advised to self-isolate for 10 days. We recommend against this because the contamination is already grossly spread and not from human sources. We recommend human evacuation and/or that the source be held liable and shut down immediately to prevent outbreaks.
What can be done to protect ourselves and the staff?
At present, community pharmacies are suggested to set strict measures to protect pharmacy staff and keep at least a 6 ft distance from staff members and the patients at the pharmacy. We advise radically effective solutions based on antigenic air quality at specific times and durations in the day that we can guarantee create a pandemic-free environment in any given workspace, including laboratory. We also do not recommend isolation except from confined farmed animals at slaughter environments.
We also recommend that hospitals and treatment technologies be a priority and not vaccinations. Vaccines disrupt the gut-brain licensing that is vital for human environmental responsiveness. Without this responsiveness, such as when it is blocked or impaired by antibodies and antibody-based vaccines, long-term impairments including obesity, allergy and lymphatic disorders develop as well as overcompensation by other hormonal signaling processes. The most serious of these is the loss of brain neuronal and glial cell growth. Viruses also evolve to overcome vaccine resistance effects such as via a glycan shell layer and new strains.
Virus related vaccines do not kill virus nor prevent reinfection and that repeated vaccination also has been found to leave inoculants with higher viral loads upon re-infection. And so, our solution which is an important feature of environmental sustainability and ecological measurement, ensures that virus outbreaks never happen in human populations - and that the need for pharmaceutical prophylactic vaccines is not justified. Environments that change mean diseases stop. We deliver that change in 100 days or less.