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[Dunia]
World Ebola Fears Grow With Europe and Asia On Alert.
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Acong posted on 1-8-2014 05:00 AM
ko kasik blend itu daun betik, tapis sisa utk ambil 'air' nya
As expected. Jawapan ini yang majoriti orang kita akan kasi bila sebut pasal "extrak". Walaupun aku bukan dalam bidang ini, but trust me, benda ni tak semudah itu.
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Babai posted on 1-8-2014 05:04 AM
As expected. Jawapan ini yang majoriti orang kita akan kasi bila sebut pasal "extrak". Walaupun ak ...
nie panggil ekstrak akues
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Acong posted on 1-8-2014 04:59 AM
internal bleeding maa...... masalah platelet..... so ekstrak daun betik boleh kasik tambah platele ...
hurm..
logik..
pun boleh start stok 100 plus banyak2
macam bila kena denggi kan
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FanTasyCreaTioN posted on 31-7-2014 04:11 PM
hurm..
logik..
pun boleh start stok 100 plus banyak2
masa my husband kena demam denggi kat haiti,
takdanya ada ubat ubat ni, sebulan jugaklah ambil masa untuk cergas
balik..
malaysia untung kalau kena demam denggi, pegi hospital, duduk kat ward, daun betik,
air 100 plus...
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faraway1 posted on 1-8-2014 05:22 AM
masa my husband kena demam denggi kat haiti,
takdanya ada ubat ubat ni, sebulan jugaklah ambil ma ...
ades .. cian kat suami akak..
tentu sengsara masa tu
kita tau pasal 100 plus ni dari sorang kawan.. adik dia kena denggi
doktor sendiri sarankan minum 100 plus ni
bukan ubat .. tapi tambah tenaga untuk melawan sakit tu
idak la jadi lembik
bila lembik .. memang abes la
sup ketam tu pun kawan tu gak bagitau
alhamdulillah .. adik dia seminggu ja kat spital
Selamat Hari Raya kak
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FanTasyCreaTioN posted on 31-7-2014 04:26 PM
ades .. cian kat suami akak..
tentu sengsara masa tu
kat sini canada cam tak da rawatan khusus untuk demam denggi pun,
doctor suruh rehat kat rumah aje cuma buat xray jugaklah tenguk dada tu ok ke tak ok.
tak sangka boleh kena demam denggi tu satu hal sebab makan ubat anti denggi..
dah nak kena kot.. so jadi...
tapi masa akak kena demam denggi masa di malaysia, duduk ward seminggu dan
minum air 100 plus....
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faraway1 posted on 1-8-2014 05:29 AM
kat sini canada cam tak da rawatan khusus untuk demam denggi pun,
doctor suruh rehat kat rumah aj ...
hg pi haiti buat apa fara???makan angin ka??? haiti dah pulih 100% ka???
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faraway1 posted on 1-8-2014 05:29 AM
kat sini canada cam tak da rawatan khusus untuk demam denggi pun,
doctor suruh rehat kat rumah aj ...
kita refer kat kes adik kawan ja
katanya doc akan sentiasa pantau platelet darah
kalo drop sangat baru masuk icu
ha`ah ..
pernah gaak dengar kes .. walaupun ambik ubat anti denggi pun kena gak
harap la wabak ebola ni dapat d bendung kat sana tu
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Acong posted on 1-8-2014 05:00 AM
ko kasik blend itu daun betik, tapis sisa utk ambil 'air' nya
Kira jus la ek..baru aku tau..daun betik untuk denggi |
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noell posted on 31-7-2014 07:10 PM
hg pi haiti buat apa fara???makan angin ka??? haiti dah pulih 100% ka???
syarikat abang ipar me dapat kontrak contruction
kat port au prince, so my husband keja dengan abang dia masa winter lepas...
so merasalah me melawat port au prince...
pulih 100 % tu susah nak kata, ianya cam terbahagi dua, satu pulih kehidupan cam
normal, mewah, cam kami, rumah kami duduk siap swimming pool semua..
dan satu bahagian still tinggal dalam khemah dengan
bangunan yang rosak teruk masa gempa bumi tu masih ada,
ianya cam dibiarkan aje tak berusik sebab haiti negara miskin
penuh corrup ni..
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The World Health Organisation on Friday (August 1) warned west Africa's Ebola-hit nations that the response to the epidemic had been "woefully inadequate", and the epidemic was spiralling out of control and could spread to other countries - causing "catastrophic" loss of life.
CONAKRY: The World Health Organisation warned west Africa's Ebola-hit nations on Friday (August 1) that the epidemic was spiralling out of control and could spread to other countries, causing "catastrophic" loss of life and severe economic disruption.
WHO chief Margaret Chan told the leaders of Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia at a regional summit that the response to the epidemic had been "woefully inadequate", revealing that the outbreak was "moving faster than our efforts to control it".
The leaders were in Guinean capital Conakry to organise the deployment of hundreds of extra medical personnel as part of US$100 million (S$125 million) emergency response to an epidemic which has claimed more than 700 lives.
The plan will also bolster efforts to prevent and detect suspected cases, urge better border surveillance, and reinforce WHO's sub-regional outbreak coordination centre in Guinea.
"If the situation continues to deteriorate, the consequences can be catastrophic in terms of lost lives but also severe socio-economic disruption and a high risk of spread to other countries," Chan said. She described the outbreak as "by far the largest ever in the nearly four-decade history of this disease".
"It is taking place in areas with fluid population movements over porous borders, and it has demonstrated its ability to spread via air travel, contrary to what has been seen in past outbreaks," she told the summit. "Cases are occurring in rural areas which are difficult to access, but also in densely populated capital cities. This meeting must mark a turning point in the outbreak response."
The meeting came after Dubai's Emirates became the first global airline to announce it was suspending flights to the stricken area while the United States, Germany and France issued warnings against travel to the three African countries. Meanwhile, Nigeria quarantined two people who had "primary contact" with a man who died of Ebola in Lagos last week as west Africa battled to tame the outbreak.
The WHO raised the death toll by 57 to 729 on Thursday, announcing that 122 new cases had been detected between Thursday and Sunday last week, bringing the total to more than 1,300. "Current numbers of national and international response staff are woefully inadequate," Chan said, revealing that 60 health workers had died treating patients in the outbreak.
'NEARING CATASTROPHE'
Sierra Leone's leader Ernest Bai Koroma has announced a state of emergency, quarantining Ebola-hit areas and cancelling foreign trips by ministers, while Liberia has closed all of its schools and put government workers on leave. Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf warned ahead of the summit that the crisis was "nearing a catastrophe" and appealed for more doctors and supplies.
Early denial about the dangers of the contagious disease among Liberians has now "turned into fear and panic", she told CNN television. "There are dead bodies all over the place and they now know that it's real. They know that it's deadly and they are now beginning to respond," Sirleaf said.
The summit marks the first time heads of state in west Africa have met specifically to discuss a joint response to the crisis, although Ebola has come up at a previous regional meeting. As a member of the Mano River Union bloc which groups the nations, Ivory Coast is also represented, by Health Minister Raymonde Goudou Coffie, although it has yet to register any Ebola cases.
Ebola, which has no vaccine, causes severe muscular pains, fever, headaches and, in the worst cases, unstoppable bleeding. It has killed around two-thirds of those it has infected since its emergence in 1976, with two outbreaks registering case fatality rates approaching 90 percent. The death rate in the current outbreak is a lower-than-average 55 percent.
Fears that it could spread to other continents through air travel have been growing, with European and Asian countries on alert alongside African countries outside the Ebola crisis zone. In Britain, Sierra Leone cyclist Moses Sesay was quarantined and tested for Ebola at the Commonwealth Games in Glasgow, before being given the all-clear, the athlete told a British newspaper.
Elsewhere in Africa, Kenya, Ethiopia and Democratic Republic of Congo, home to some of the continent's largest transport hubs, said they had enhanced screening at border points and airports.
Pan-African airlines Arik and ASKY have halted flights to and from Liberia and Sierra Leone, while Asia-Pacific nations from Hong Kong to Australia have announced tighter security measures at airports, some warning against travel to the Ebola-hit countries.
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Credit To:
http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/world/us-evacuating-two/1293530.html
Two Americans infected with Ebola in West Africa will be evacuated back to the United States in the coming days to be cared for in strict isolation, officials said Friday (August 1).
WASHINGTON: Two Americans infected with Ebola in West Africa will be evacuated back to the United States in the coming days to be cared for in strict isolation, officials said Friday (August 1). Kent Brantly, a doctor who was treating Ebola patients in Liberia, and Christian missionary worker Nancy Writebol, are being flown home but the exact timing of their arrival is uncertain, their aid groups said.
Both are in serious but stable condition and are headed for special care isolation units at a hospital in Atlanta, Georgia, after battling for their lives amid the worst outbreak of the virus in history. The hemorrhagic fever has killed 729 people of the more than 1,300 infected since March.
The World Health Organization said the fast-moving outbreak was causing "catastrophic" loss of life in the affected countries of Guinea, Liberia, Nigeria and Sierra Leone.
"The safety and security of US citizens is our paramount concern," State Department deputy spokeswoman Marie Harf said, confirming her agency was facilitating the medical evacuation with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). "Every precaution is being taken to move the patients safely and securely, to provide critical care en route on a non-commercial aircraft and to maintain strict isolation upon arrival in the United States."
They will be "taken to medical facilities with appropriate isolation and treatment capabilities," Harf added.
Both patients will be sent to Emory University Hospital, though they may arrive at separate times, according to Bruce Ribner, an infectious disease specialist. In contrast to where they are currently receiving treatment, "we can deliver a substantially higher level of care and a substantially higher level of support to optimize the likelihood that those patients will survive this episode," he told a news conference.
The hospital said it has a "specially built isolation unit" made for patients with certain serious infectious diseases and which is one of only four such facilities in the country.
The Pentagon said the patients would be arriving in a non-military plane at Dobbins Air Reserve Base in Georgia.
"We are grateful that Kent Brantly and Nancy Writebol made it through the night," said Franklin Graham, president of Samaritan's Purse, the group for which Brantly worked. "They remain in serious condition. The medical evacuations could be complete early in the week."
TRAVEL HARMFUL?
CDC chief Tom Frieden said the decision to evacuate the two Americans was made by the aid groups for which they worked, not the CDC, though the agency "want(s) to support them in their decision."
"One thing we've traditionally said is that if someone has Ebola, the risk of medical evaluation may well outweigh the benefits of a higher level of medical care," Frieden told CNN. "A flight over the ocean is arduous. Someone who has Ebola may have delicate arteries and veins. That may lead to bleeding complications. So travel itself may be harmful."
Harf said CDC protocols were being followed in an effort to protect "the patient and the American public, as has been done with similar medical evacuations in the past."
The World Health Organization warned West Africa's Ebola-hit nations that the epidemic was spiralling out of control and could spread to other countries.
The WHO raised the death toll by 57 to 729 on Thursday, announcing that 122 new cases had been detected between Thursday and Sunday last week, bringing the total to more than 1,300 since the epidemic began earlier this year.
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tolong tembak mampus gagak hitam yg nak masuk dalam Malaysia..kalu boleh tembak yg dah ada kt sini jgk sekali harung |
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hati2 dkt filipina dah ada kes ni..... |
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FanTasyCreaTioN posted on 31-7-2014 08:07 AM
tanda2 ebola
nk tanye virus ni tersebar pakai ape..?
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Air France dgn Delta dah terminated flight dorang gi negara2 yg ada penyakit nih
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virus ni juga boleh tersebar melalui air travel
Liberian-American Man Contracts Ebola and Dies on Way Home to Minnesota
(CNN) -- Patrick Sawyer had one stop to make before heading home to Minnesota to celebrate his daughters' birthdays: a conference in Lagos, Nigeria.
But when he landed in Lagos, Sawyer, 40, collapsed getting off the plane. He had been infected with Ebola in Liberia, where he worked as a top government official in the Liberian Ministry of Finance.
Sawyer was isolated at a local Nigerian hospital on July 20. He died five days later.
http://www.cnn.com/2014/07/29/health...html?hpt=hp_t1
jgn sesekali naik pesawat dari afrika or pergi afrika
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