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LoginInterview Questions English 1 year ago
Posted on 18 Jan 2024, this text provides information on English related to Interview Questions. Please note that while accuracy is prioritized, the data presented might not be entirely correct or up-to-date. This information is offered for general knowledge and informational purposes only, and should not be considered as a substitute for professional advice.
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ElwoodTigGC ElwoodTigGC
Best Answer
1 year ago
Most of the great PANDEMICS in RECENT recorded history have lasted several years.• The Antonine Plague of 165 AD afflicted and DEVASTATED the Roman Empire. The EMPEROR of Rome Marcus Aurelius also succumbed to it. It continued until 180 AD.• The “black death” pandemic of pneumonic plague too lasted for four years, from 1347 to 1350. It spent considerable time in each area it infested, ravaging the local population completely before moving on to the next.• Between the years 1831 to 1837, an influenza pandemic swept across Europe in three waves: one each in 1831, 1833 and 1837.• The Russian Flu of 1889 lasted for almost two years, killing 360,000 people.• The influenza pandemic of 1899 lasted for five years. Over one lakh British citizens perished in this pandemic.• The 1918 Spanish Flu influenza pandemic, arguably the most devastating in history, killed an estimated 50 million people in three waves between March 1918 and November 1919. Each wave had as high mortality as the previous one. However, the first outbreaks of this disease had been recorded in 1917 by two separate groups of researchers.And as you read this article, COVID-19 has entered its third calendar year: the first cases were reported towards the end of 2019, spread across the globe rapidly in 2020 and is raging on in the first half of 2021, having taken over 2.8 million lives worldwide. Going by the history of pandemics, one can say with some degree of confidence that the behaviour of the COVID-19 pandemic is not particularly unusual with regard to its resurgence as “waves.”Phases of pandemicsThe above chart by the World Health Organisation shows the natural course of pandemics. We are in phases 5-6 of the COVID-19 pandemic, as the number of cases are still rising globally. Most experts agree that COVID-19 too would eventually become a post-pandemic seasonal illness.Factors responsible for “pandemic waves”Several factors have been identified for ebb and wave patterns in the transmission of pandemics. Daihai et al. proposed a simple model for the three waves of the 1918 influenza pandemic, that involved:• Schools opening and closing.• Temperature changes during the outbreak.• Changes in human behaviour in response to the outbreak.
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