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[Dunia] China lagi. Wabak bubonik pula dikesan di China. Pesakit disyaki makan haiwan ma

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Post time 6-7-2020 12:30 PM | Show all posts |Read mode
Belum pun reda isu COVID-19, wabak bubonik pula dikesan di China
Agensi | Diterjemahkan oleh: Sahlizah Mohamed
Diterbitkan pada Julai 06, 2020 08:37 +08

BEIJING: Dalam situasi dunia masih tercari-cari vaksin bagi mengekang pandemik COVID-19, dua kes jangkitan wabak bubonik pula dikesan di sebuah bandar di utara China pada Ahad.

Kes tersebut dilaporkan di sebuah hospital di Bayannur, Inner Mongolia sekali gus mendorong kerajaan mengeluarkan amaran berhubung penyakit itu sehingga hujung tahun ini.

“Buat masa ini, terdapat risiko wabak itu akan merebak di bandar berkenaan.

"Orang ramai digesa meningkatkan kawalan keselamatan diri dan mendapatkan rawatan jika berasa tidak sihat,” kata pihak berkuasa keselamatan tempatan.
Terdahulu, pada 1 Julai, media tempatan Xianhua melaporkan terdapat dua pesakit yang disyaki dijangkiti wabak bubonik di wilayah Khovd, di barat Mongolia.

Suspek berusia 27 dan 17 tahun itu disahkan positif selepas melalui ujian makmal dan kini ditempatkan di dua hospital.
Pesakit yang merupakan adik-beradik itu disahkan dijangkiti wabak bubonik selepas menikmati haiwan marmot.

Marmot merupakan haiwan daripada spesies tupai tanah dengan nama saintifiknya Marmota.

Haiwan dalam kelas herbivor itu dikenal pasti hidup di Asia, Eropah dan Utara Amerika.

Dalam perkembangan sama, seramai 146 individu yang dikesan mempunyai kontak rapat dengan mangsa telah diasingkan dan dirawat di hospital.

Wabak bubonik berpunca daripada bakteria yang disebarkan melalui pepijat yang hidup dalam spesies tikus termasuk marmot.

Ia mampu membunuh dalam masa 24 jam jika tidak dirawat, menurut Pertubuhan Kesihatan Sedunia (WHO).

Tahun lalu, dua individu yang dijangkiti wabak bubonik di sebuah wilayah di barat Mongolia, Bayan-Ulhii maut selepas memakan daging marmot mentah.

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Post time 6-7-2020 12:35 PM | Show all posts
apa celaka la semua benda kau nak baham..
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Post time 6-7-2020 12:37 PM | Show all posts
kenapalah ko sanggup makan marmot yang yang cute itew...
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Post time 6-7-2020 12:43 PM | Show all posts
Bertimpa2 wabak melada moga hanya berlaku disana tak merebak kenegara lain
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Post time 6-7-2020 01:08 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
apa rasa makan daging mentah ? ada rasa darah2???
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Post time 6-7-2020 01:16 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Edited by sarah82 at 6-7-2020 01:18 PM

Erk.. Aku ingatkan dah tak wujud..
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 Author| Post time 6-7-2020 01:17 PM | Show all posts
sejak dulu, cina suka telan anak tikus yg baru lahir
katanya utk tenaga batin
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Post time 6-7-2020 01:26 PM | Show all posts
Edited by haryatie at 6-7-2020 01:29 PM

issshhhh dia org ni kebulur sunggguhhhhjgn bagi la dia org ni ke luar dr negara dia org tu
duk je la terperap kat china
kang ntah apa lg merebak
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Post time 6-7-2020 01:40 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Apa je yg yg diorang x makan.. tolak batu kayu je
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Post time 6-7-2020 01:44 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
umbut replied at 6-7-2020 01:40 PM
Apa je yg yg diorang x makan.. tolak batu kayu je

Demi likes silap2 batu n kayu pn diorg sggp mkn....
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Post time 6-7-2020 01:46 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts


Nasib ko la Marmod dok china

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Post time 6-7-2020 02:04 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Seeloknya border China tutup terus..
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Post time 6-7-2020 02:09 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
China lagiii...asal yang aneh2 jer dari sana.
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Post time 6-7-2020 02:15 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Black plague?
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Post time 6-7-2020 02:17 PM | Show all posts

Ni penyakit yang agak ancient. Disebabkan mereka yang makan haiwan liar, sekarang penyakit ni "bangun" dan mungkin merebak kalau tak dikawal.
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Post time 6-7-2020 02:20 PM | Show all posts
bubonic plague?
the black death tu ke


haaaaa?????


oh noooooooooooooo


hai yaaa makanlah haiwan dan tumbuhan yg halal dan baik


ikut je apa islam as a universal religion buat


aiyoyoooooooo


marmot pun hampa makan keeee

adoiiii
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Post time 6-7-2020 02:30 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
insulin replied at 6-7-2020 02:17 PM
Ni penyakit yang agak ancient. Disebabkan mereka yang makan haiwan liar, sekarang penyakit ni "ban ...

Kan..lagi satu kotorrrr..
Jadi bergabung dan meletupp
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 Author| Post time 6-7-2020 02:49 PM | Show all posts
What is bubonic plague, aka 'black death', reported in China? All you need to know

It caused one of the worst pandemics that killed off half of Europe in 14th century
Web Desk July 06, 2020 07:46 IST


China has sounded an alert after a suspected case of the bubonic plague was reported in Bayan Nur, in the northern Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region. A level III warning of plague prevention and control has been issued, the state-run People's Daily Online reported.

How did it spread? Unclear. However, the alert asks people to immediately report any sick or dead marmot (large and heavy rodents that resemble squirrels), and forbids the hunting and eating of animals that could carry the plague. Five days before, Chinese news agency Xinhua had reported two suspected cases of bubonic plague in Khovd province in western Mongolia—two brothers had consumed marmot meat.

News agency PTI quoted the local health authority as saying: "At present, there is a risk of a human plague epidemic spreading in this city. The public should improve its self-protection awareness and ability, and report abnormal health conditions promptly." According to reports, the authorities announced that the warning period will continue until the end of 2020.

What is bubonic plague?

According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), the disease is caused by the bacteria Yersinia Pestis, a zoonotic bacteria usually found in small mammals and their fleas, with the symptoms of the disease appearing after an incubation period of one to seven days. The disease usually spreads from bites of fleas that have fed upon infected creatures like mice, rats, rabbits and squirrels.

What is the disease? There are two main forms of the plague: bubonic and pneumonic (when plague advances to the lungs). According to WHO, bubonic plague is the most common form and is characterised by painful swollen lymph nodes or 'buboes'. It is a rare disease now—from 2010 to 2015, there were 3,248 cases reported worldwide, including 584 deaths. It is now mostly endemic in Democratic Republic of the Congo, Madagascar, and Peru.

How fatal is it? In the Middle Ages, a bubonic plague pandemic, also known as the 'black death', had wiped out more than half of Europe's population. However, with the availability of antibiotics, the disease is largely treatable now. If not treated on time, bubonic plague has a case-fatality ratio of 30 per cent to 60 cent, while its septicaemic (circulation in bloodstream) and pneumonic kind can touch 100 per cent fatality. If diagnosed and treated on time, the disease has about a 10 per cent fatality rate.

What are its symptoms? According to WHO: Sudden onset of fever, chills, head and body aches, and weakness, vomiting and nausea. In bubonic plague, the lymph node becomes inflamed, tense and painful (almost the size of a chicken's egg), called a ‘bubo’. At advanced stages of the infection, the inflamed lymph nodes can turn into open sores filled with pus. When it advances to the lungs, pneumonic plague becomes the most virulent form of plague. Septicaemic plague (in bloodstream) can cause tissue death and subsequent blackening of fingers, toes and nose, according to Mayo Clinic.

How does it transmit? According to WHO, human-to-human transmission of bubonic plague is rare. However, any person with pneumonic plague may transmit the disease via droplets to other humans.

Bubonic plague in history

It resulted in 'black death', one of the worst pandemics in human history that claimed millions of lives in the 14th century. The disease is expected to have originated somewhere in Asia, spreading through China and India, before killing of an estimated two-thirds of the European population in the 1340s and 1350s. While antibiotics can now treat the disease now, the airborne spread of the highly contagious disease wreaked havoc and frenzy across the world; healthy people were found dead overnight, and sailors started arriving at ports either dead or rotting, or covered in black contusions, pus and blood. There were riots and massacres of the Jewish people, and the disease is believed to have been brought under control by strict quarantine measures and public hygiene enactments.
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Post time 6-7-2020 02:55 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Dah di beri petunjuk supaya jangan makan haiwan liar pun masih tak faham leluhur2 ni. Nak nuclear satu china tu takut peniaga malaysia pulak tak boleh meniaga barang2 china.
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Post time 6-7-2020 05:19 PM | Show all posts
Teringat kat video ni
sejak sepupu aku post benda ni hari2 aku tgk
setiap kali tgk mesti gelak


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