Covid 19

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COVID-19

Know the facts: Coronavirus disease or commonly known as COVID-19, it known for its fatality yet
people managed to healed up from virus. What is COVID-19, and how do we manage to avoid it?
How would you let them understand COVID-19 reports in your erea and to be disseminated.

Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) is an infectious disease caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus. Most
people infected with the virus will experience mild to moderate respiratory illness and recover
without requiring special treatment. Some will become seriously ill and require medical attention.
Older people and those with underlying medical conditions like cardiovascular disease, diabetes,
chronic respiratory disease, or cancer are more likely to develop serious illness. Anyone can get sick
with COVID-19 and become seriously ill or die at any age. The best way to prevent and slow down
transmission is to be well informed about the disease and how the virus spreads. Protect yourself
and others from infection by staying at least 1 metre apart from others, wearing a properly fitted
mask, and washing your hands or using an alcohol-based rub frequently. Get vaccinated when it’s
your turn and follow local guidance.The virus can spread from an infected person’s mouth or nose in
small liquid particles when they cough, sneeze, speak, sing or breathe. These particles range from
larger respiratory droplets to smaller aerosols. It is important to practice respiratory etiquette, for
example by coughing into a flexed elbow, and to stay home and self-isolate until you recover if you
feel unwell.

As an international organization based in New York City, at the Social Science Research Council
(SSRC) have encountered the Covid-19 crisis on several levels, including familial, civic, scholarly, and
global. Like many of you, we have also faced the challenges that characterize this uncertain period.
The crisis precipitated by the novel coronavirus has demanded that we all be more imaginative and
resilient. While the SSRC takes on the pandemic’s immediate and imminent consequences with fresh
approaches, we also recognize that scholarly deliberation and extended perspective play a unique
and important role in this moment. We have been reflecting on how the tradition of our nearly
century-old mission has attuned us to respond to our present, but with the flexibility required of this
time. The International Dissertation Research Fellowship program has just selected a new class of 70
doctoral researchers. SSRC program staff are working tirelessly to support our current fellows and
grantees whose research and travel have been disrupted. Finally, we are committed to being as
flexible as possible in helping scholars adjust their work plans and undertake their research under
new conditions, including stimulating discussion of vaccines.

Vaccines contain weakened or inactive parts of a particular organism (antigen) that triggers an
immune response within the body. Newer vaccines contain the blueprint for producing antigens
rather than the antigen itself. Regardless of whether the vaccine is made up of the antigen itself or
the blueprint so that the body will produce the antigen, this weakened version will not cause the
disease in the person receiving the vaccine, but it will prompt their immune system to respond much
as it would have on its first reaction to the actual pathogen. Once the antigen-specific antibodies are
produced, they work with the rest of the immune system to destroy the pathogen and stop the
disease. Antibodies to one pathogen generally don’t protect against another pathogen except when
two pathogens are very similar to each other, like cousins. Once the body produces antibodies in its
primary response to an antigen, it also creates antibody-producing memory cells, which remain alive
even after the pathogen is defeated by the antibodies. If the body is exposed to the same pathogen
more than once, the antibody response is much faster and more effective than the first time around
because the memory cells are at the ready to pump out antibodies against that antigen.This means
that if the person is exposed to the dangerous pathogen in the future, their immune system will be
able to respond immediately, protecting against disease.

Understanding how we disseminate the virus through Professionals, and how we avoid them using
the facts and disseminating the function of vaccines. We almost overcome the crisis by Researchers,
Scientists, and Professionals help. Today, we are facing to precarious world overcoming it by
gathering informations and attaining The Professional advice today, and giving them a more support
and trust.

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