AUSTRALIANOS ESTÚPIDOS E INCONSCIENTES(o meu país está mesmo a saque)

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Hello world, look how stupid we are here downunder…😡😡😡

Dozens of people were seen swimming and jogging at a popular beach.

Estados Unidos ultrapassam China e Itália em número de infetados – Executive Digest

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Os Estados Unidos ultrapassaram a Itália e a China em número de infetados com o Covid-19. Segundo a última contagem são já quase 82 mil. Nova Iorque e Nova Jérsia concentram metade dos casos. A Organização Mundial de Saúde já tinha avisado que o país seria o próximo epicentro da pandemia.

Source: Estados Unidos ultrapassam China e Itália em número de infetados – Executive Digest

NAO PODEMOS COMPARAR O COVID COM OUTRAS DOENÇAS E VIRUS

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Pra quem está comparando com sarampo, h1n1, dengue etc, é o seguinte…
Acho que não entenderam…
A quarentena não é pela saúde, não é pelo contágio, não é pelo número de mortes. Portanto parem de comparar com qualquer doença.
A quarentena é por causa da VELOCIDADE!
Nenhuma dessas doenças mataram mais de mil pessoas POR DIA e todo dia!
E a quarentena NÃO É por causa da quantidade rápida de mortos.
Entendam…
A quarentena é por causa da quantidade de leitos, médicos, equipamentos e remédios!
Se não nos isolarmos, teremos o colapso do atendimento, e pessoas terão que morrer em casa!
Aos milhares.
Diariamente.
Deu pra entender agora?
Parem de comparar com qualquer coisa que vcs estão lendo e estudem a peste negra.
Daí sim vcs entenderão o que é dizimar um terço da população mundial…

O EXEMPLO DE MACAU na guerra contra um gigante.

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O EXEMPLO DE MACAU na guerra contra um gigante.

Importante artigo de reflexão do meu Colega e amigo João Miguel Barros.

Em Macau ainda não entra ninguém que não tenha o estatuto de residente. E os residentes de Macau, imediatamente após a entrada, são obrigados a fazer …

Escolas Médicas Portuguesas defendem «uso generalizado de máscaras»

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Oiçam este senhor e aprendam com a experiência dos outros!

O apelo do Conselho de Escolas Médicas Portuguesas (CNEM) vai em sentido contrário ao defendido pela Direção-Geral da Saúde, que ‘não recomenda, até ao momento, o uso de máscara de proteção para pessoas que não apresentam sintomas’.

Alastra epidemia de ″chantagem e despedimentos ilegais″

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Carlos Alberto Machado
Yesterday at 00:41

Trabalhadores enviados para casa estão sem garantia de salário ao fim do mês, de reabertura da empresa ou de apoio social da restauração, hotelaria, comércio, serviços e até da indústria.

DURANTE A CRISE ESPECIALISTA DA ONU DEFENDE RENDA MÍNIMA UNIVERSAL

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Carlos Fino and 2 others shared a link.
Em entrevista à RFI, o especialista independente da ONU, Juan Pablo Bohoslavsky, defende, durante a crise econômica provocada pela epidemia de coronavírus, a implementação de uma renda mínima univers…

Em entrevista à RFI, o especialista independente da ONU, Juan Pablo Bohoslavsky, defende, durante a crise econômica provocada pela epidemia de coronavírus, a implementação de uma renda mínima univers…
  • DURANTE A CRISE
    ESPECIALISTA DA ONU DEFENDE RENDA MÍNIMA UNIVERSAL

TIMOR E OS COVIDIOTAS

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DESABAFO

Sei que há falta de alguma informação.

E que ao longo das últimas semanas foram criadas e implementadas novas regras que condicionam a vida do pessoal.

Como nem todas as regras são conhecidas, deixo aqui algumas das regras que agora foram ampliadas para definir uma nova categoria de cidadãos: o covidiota

Caso se reveja em alguns dos exemplos, por favor mude de atitude. É simples: deixe de ser covidiota.

1 – Se o mandam ficar em casa, fique em casa. Deixe lá o jogging, o cão, o passear à beira mar. Não seja covidiota.

2 – Se viajou mantenha-se em quarentena preventiva. Não arrisque a vida dos outros. Não seja covidiota.

3 – Se conhece alguém que possa estar infetado ou locais que estão a ser usados para quarentena ou onde, infelizmente, há pessoas infetadas, exerça todas as precauções necessárias mas deixe de insultar, denunciar, atacar, apedrejar as pessoas. Não seja covidiota.

4 – O direito à privacidade dos doentes é muito importante. Por isso deixe de querer saber quem está infetado e quem não está. As autoridades farão o seguimento dos contactos necessários. O seu contributo nesta matéria é, acima de tudo, mórbido e nefasto. Não seja covidiota.

5 – O vírus é a coisa menos racista que há neste momento no planeta, não escolhe idade, cor, raça, origem, étnica, nacionalidade, estado civil, género, orientação sexual, tamanho da conta do banco ou, infelizmente, nível de estupidez. Por isso deixe a conversa do vírus chinês, do vírus dos velhos, do vírus dos ‘turistas que têm a mania’, do vírus do malae, do vírus dos climas frios. Não seja covidiota.

6 – Em momentos de medo é normal que as pessoas se preparem. Isso inclui comprar mais coisas para ter em casa. Mas não precisa de lá ter o supermercado ou a farmácia. Compre com responsabilidade. Não seja covidiota.

7 – Está por acaso no estrangeiro, especialmente por vontade? Veio passear ou decidiu, livremente, vir trabalhar para outro sítio? Já sabia como era a vida nesse sítio? Já sabia que ia ter condicionalismos? Então deixe de olhar só para o seu umbigo. É legitimo ter receio, mas quando se exagera a falar de ataques que não existem, de drama que não se vive, está a ser um anormal ou uma anormal irresponsável. O Estado não é tipo agência de viagens. E as suas ações têm impacto num grupo de pessoas muito maior do aquele que as palas que tem nos olhos deixam ver. É fácil. Não seja covidiota.

8 – Acha-se inteligente e informado? Acha que sabe muito sobre muita coisa? Acha que tá dentro da informação? Se respondeu sim então deixe de partilhar noticias falsas, vídeos falsos, informações falsas. Se respondeu não, então informe-se e não partilhe nada até ter a certeza que é verdadeiro. Não seja covidiota.

Se tiverem mais ideias do que representa ser covidiota, digam.

Image may contain: possible text that says 'idiota COVID Pessoa sem inteligência, discernimento ou bom senso; ignorante. Quem diz tolices ou coisas sem nexo; tolo, estúpido.'
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covid19 pode perpetuar-se na indonésia

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«When the bones of a hitherto-unknown relative of modern man were found on the Indonesian island of Flores in 2003, the discovery shocked the scientific world into rethinking some of its most basic assumptions about our evolution.
What surprised scientists about this one-metre-tall pygmy human (homo floresiensis or “the little lady of Flores”) was not only that she had existed so recently – 50,000 years is the blink of an eyelid in evolutionary terms – but also that clues to her existence had evaded us for so long.

Perhaps it should not have been surprising. Indonesia’s 2 million square kilometres comprise 18,000 or so islands, providing ample hiding space for even the shyest of hominids – and much else besides. Countless species of undescribed birds, animals and plants live in these remote worlds, as do uncontacted and minimally contacted human tribes.
Coronavirus: poor Indonesian families most at risk of sudden spike in infections
15 Mar 2020

Unfortunately, the same remoteness and isolation of these islands that give us such cause for wonder is also what makes Indonesia so uniquely vulnerable to the ravages of the coronavirus.

The country is faced, essentially, with a ticking time bomb. If it fails to get a grip on the crisis soon, the virus will spread to more remote islands where it will be able to fester, undiscovered and untreated for years to come. Much as Lucy managed to evade our detection for all those years, the coronavirus could live on in Indonesia long after it has disappeared from the rest of the world.

AN UNKNOWN OPPONENT
For weeks after the first cases of the coronavirus were discovered in Wuhan, China, some Indonesians appeared under the impression they would be spared its ravages. So much so than when a Harvard study suggested in February there might be undetected cases given the country’s strong travel links with China, it was denounced as “insulting” by none other than the country’s health minister Terawan Agus Putranto. The clean sheet, said the minister, was “all because of prayers”.

Now reality is setting in. The country has reported 450 cases and 38 deaths, most of them in Jakarta, though provinces including West Java, East Java and the Riau Islands have also reported infections. Given the government’s track record, however, it’s easy to believe the reality on the ground may be worse than it’s letting on.

A big part of the problem is the arrogance of the central government led by Joko “Jokowi” Widodo, which from the beginning has not been transparent enough, either to the people or to regional governments. It was slow to notify regional governments about confirmed cases and this compromised efforts to track the disease. There was confusion between various authorities about even the most basic of information, such as the number of suspected infections and monitored individuals.

NOT ENOUGH TESTING
This has left many regional governments essentially fending for themselves. Jakarta’s governor, Anies Baswedan, revealed this week that nearly 300 patients and nearly 700 individuals were being monitored for the virus. West Java’s provincial government said it was monitoring more than 700, while Banyumas city was monitoring more than 200 and all these numbers have been growing by the day.

Meanwhile, the central government’s National Institute of Health Research and Development – which comes under the Ministry of Health – has from the beginning been the only institution with the authority to examine patients for Covid-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus.

The institute claims to be able to examine 1,700 samples a day. Yet by Monday, 16 days after the first case appeared, only 1,293 samples had been examined. Why?
Even where tests have been carried out, it takes each patient an average of three days to get the results, due to both long queues and the time needed to send specimens from remote areas to Jakarta.

What’s more, many people who attend hospitals showing symptoms have not been swabbed because they did not have a history of travel or close contact with confirmed patients, even though experts now say these considerations are no longer relevant as Indonesia has already entered the local transmission stage.

Slowly, the country is coming around to the realisation that there are hundreds if not thousands of individuals who are carrying the virus undetected and yet the central government is still not doing anything to improve its testing measures.
Indonesia should learn from South Korea. Within a month of confirming its first case of Covid-19 on January 20, South Korea had tested nearly 8,000 people. A little over a week later, that number had soared to 82,000 as health officials mobilised to carry out as many 10,000 tests each day.

For Indonesia, this means testing must be decentralised from the central government. Local administrations have been calling for any regional laboratory that meets World Health Organisation standards to screen for the disease. The central government has been slow to respond. By the beginning of last week there were still just 10 Centres for Environmental Health and Disease Control Engineering nationwide that were authorised to test, along with Airlangga University Laboratories and Eijkman Molecular Biology Institute.
DARING TO ACT
Compared to the central government, which appears hesitant to act out of fear for the economic consequences, regional governments have dared to take drastic steps.
Jakarta’s governor closed schools in the city for two weeks and postponed the National Examination. In West Java, Governor Ridwan Kamil admitted his province had been buying test kits from a neighbouring country. In Jambi province of Sumatra, the army has built a coronavirus isolation tent to make up for the lack of isolation wards in hospitals. And in Central Java, Governor Ganjar Pranowo has closed both schools and tourist destinations.
These are the local heroes, who should be celebrated. Other provinces, taking their cue from the central government, have been more hesitant to act, leaving schools and other public places very much open. The Governor of Yogyakarta said that “coronavirus should not be an obstacle for children going to school”.

IT’S THE SMALL WHO SUFFER
While it is heartening to see regional governments taking the fight to the coronavirus, the fact that the battle is taking place on so many fronts demonstrates just how great a problem Indonesia faces.
While more advanced regions, in Java for instance, might be able to fend for themselves in the absence of help from the central government, less developed regions, particularly in eastern Indonesia, will be overwhelmed.
At present, the country’s infections are concentrated in Java but we do not know whether this is because fewer people are infected outside Java or if it is simply that they haven’t been detected.
The real worry will come if, and more likely when, the virus reaches the thousands of small islands in eastern Indonesia.

Many of these are close to the border with Papua New Guinea. Cases here will be difficult to detect as there are few medical facilities and a lack of awareness about the virus.
Even on a national level, Indonesia’s health care is among the poorest in the region. It has a doctor-patient ratio of 1 to 6,250, as opposed to the WHO recommendation of 1 to 600. Yet in the islands, the situation is far worse, as more than 60 per cent of health workers are concentrated in Java.
With the central government struggling to come up with a unified strategy, the worry is that the virus may already have spread to Indonesia’s farthest reaches.
At the end of last week following the routing of the market and the rupiah, Jokowi belatedly announced a massive testing drive across the nation. We can only hope that this will be as thorough as promised. Otherwise Indonesia may well end up fighting the coronavirus long after all other countries of the world have conquered it. Without a centralised, unified response that reaches the farthest parts of the country and its myriad islands, it may well find that somewhere out there, unknown to the rest of the world, the virus lives on far longer than we thought possible, beneath the radar, just like the little lady of Flores. ■
Muhammad Zulfikar Rakhmat is an academic at Universitas Islam Indonesia. Dikanaya Tarahita is a writer who focuses on socio-economic issues in Indonesia»

The country’s remote, isolated islands offer a perfect hiding spot for the coronavirus to fester if the Jokowi government fails to act swiftly enough.

SCMP.COM
The country’s remote, isolated islands offer a perfect hiding spot for the coronavirus to fester if the Jokowi government fails to act swiftly enough.