Planning:
Purpose:
Is to tell the audience about COVID-19.
Audience Analysis:
· Our audience is the student of BSTE.
· Most of the people want to know about COVID-19.
· Health is most important thing in our life.
Ideas Choice:
1) COVID-19
2) How did the outbreak start?
3) Could the outbreak grow bigger?
4) What are the symptoms of coronavirus?
5) How is coronavirus spread?
6) Who started the coronavirus?
7) Is there a cure for the coronavirus?
8) How many people have died from the disease so far?
9) Planning.
Data:
· Graphs.
· Picture.
· Government Statistics
· Video
Preparation:
Opening:
Anybody among you who want to saw the death of your beloved family members?
Key Ideas:
COVID-19
Coronaviruses are a family of viruses that cause disease in animals. Seven, including the new virus, have made the jump to humans, but most just cause cold-like symptoms. Two other coronaviruses Middle East respiratory syndrome (Mers) and severe acute respiratory syndrome (Sars) are much more severe, having killed more than 1,500 people between them since 2002.The new virus, officially called Covid-19, is also dangerous - so far, around 20 per cent of confirmed cases have been classed as severe or critical. So far, around 15 to 20 per cent of hospital cases have been classed as "severe" and the current death rate varies between 0.7 per cent and 3.4 per cent depending on the location and, crucially, access to good hospital care. This is much lower than fatality rates for Mers (30 per cent) and Sars (10 per cent), but still a significant threat. Scientists in China believe that Covid-19 has mutated into two strains, one more aggressive than the other, which could make developing a vaccine more complicated.
1) How did the outbreak start?
The source of the coronavirus is believed to be a "wet market" in Wuhan which sold both dead and live animals including fish and birds. Such markets pose a heightened risk of viruses jumping from animals to humans because hygiene standards are difficult to maintain if live animals are being kept and butchered on site. Typically, they are also densely packed. The animal source of the latest outbreak has not yet been identified, but the original host is thought to be bats. Bats were not sold at the Wuhan market but may have infected live chickens or other animals sold there. Bats are host to a wide range of zoonotic viruses including Ebola, HIV and rabies
2) Could the outbreak grow bigger?
It is impossible to say which way the disease will go but, on its current trajectory, it is likely to spread to more countries, affecting many more people. The number of cases is beginning to decrease in China but is climbing in the rest of the world. To find out more about what is likely to happen. It looks increasingly likely that the coronavirus outbreak which started in China in December will become a global pandemic. The disease is now spreading rapidly in South Korea, Italy and Iran and is likely to be present but as yet undetected in other populous countries across Asia and the Pacific. In several countries, including Italy, there is no obvious direct link back to China, which makes containing the spread of virus all the more difficult. Critics will say the lockdown imposed by the authorities on Wuhan and much of central China has not worked and that the World Health Organization's (WHO) strategy of containment has failed. But there is little doubt China's crackdown has delayed the spread of the virus and bought the rest of the world considerable additional time to prepare. The key question now, as the virus gains territory, is whether the NHS and other health authorities around the world have used that time wisely. Here are some of the key things to expect if Covid-19 does now do a lap of the world.
1) What are the symptoms of coronavirus?
According to the World Health Organization (WHO), the main symptoms of the coronavirus usually include:
· A dry cough
· A temperature
· Tiredness/lethargy
· Shortness of breath (in more severe cases)
Some patients may have "aches and pains, nasal congestion, runny nose, sore throat or diarrhea", the WHO adds. "These symptoms are usually mild and begin gradually. Some people become infected but don’t develop any symptoms and don't feel unwell". These symptoms are similar to other respiratory diseases including flu and the common cold. So if you have symptoms, consider the following:
· Have you travelled to a high risk area such as China, South Korea or Northern Italy in the last two weeks?
· Have you been in close contact with someone with coronavirus?
1) How is coronavirus spread?
Like cold and flu bugs, the virus is spread via droplets when a person coughs or sneezes. The droplets land on surfaces and are picked up on the hands of others and spread further. People catch the virus when they touch their infected hands to their mouth, nose or eyes.
It follows that the single most important thing you can do to protect yourself is keep your hands clean by washing them frequently with soap and water or a hand sanitizing gel. For more information on how to protect yourself, go to our guides on symptoms and treatments.
1) Who started the coronavirus?
Various crazy conspiracy theories have been circulating that the virus somehow escaped from a Chinese lab, either by accident or design. However, this is categorically untrue and scientists studying its genetic code have linked it to bats. It probably then jumped to another animal, which passed it on to humans. The number of diseases crossing from animals to humans is growing, and teams of virus hunters are tracking them down.
1) Is there a cure for the coronavirus?
There is no specific treatment, although doctors are trialing existing drugs for viruses such as Ebola and HIV. Early results seem promising but, until full clinical trials have been concluded, doctors cannot be certain that the drugs are effective. Work to develop a vaccine is accelerating, but this work has been complicated by the virus mutating into a second strain.
2) How many people have died from the disease so far?
More than 336,000 cases have been confirmed since the outbreak started, and the death toll has exceeded 14,600. The majority of cases are now outside China, and the virus has spread to more than 150 other countries. According to data from the Chinese authorities, around 80 per cent of cases of the disease are mild, but 20 per cent require hospitalization, and the death rate has varied by country. In Pakistan there are 803 confirm cases of coronavirus uptill now and 6 persons have died due to COVID-19. Cases are still increasing. But the death rate is increasing continuously.
Closing:
· In the recent 5 months there has been a worst lock-down in Kashmir and the whole world showed criminal silence and hundred’s of people died due brutality of Indian army.
· In Syria a young kid before dying said that:
“I will tell all the story to Allah”
· I think he did and Allah listen to his cries. As no one raised their voice in favor of the innocent Kashmiri’s, Syrian`s and people of other Islamic countries like Iraq and Afghanistan.
· So I think it’s some sort of revenge of nature. So that the negligent world may experience what the lock down is and how vixen it is to stay in isolation for no crime.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i0ZabxXmH4Y(Must Watch this vedio)
Good work
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