Tag: coronavirus

  • Pakistani billionaire announces Rs1 billion for COVID-19 battle

    As Pakistan wages war on the coronavirus pandemic, chairperson of Dawood Hercules Corporation — parent organisation of Pakistani multinational conglomerate Engro Corporation — and billionaire Hussain Dawood has announced pledging a contribution in services, kind and cash of Rs1 billion for a short, medium and long-term basis, on behalf of Dawood Hercules, Engro and his family.

    “We are committed to help solve some of the most pressing issues of our time and it is incumbent upon us to serve our nation best when it needs us most.  These are our fundamental values that continue to be at the core of what we strive to achieve,” Hussain said in a press release issued Thursday

    “We must work on several fronts concurrently. The need of the hour is to target on reducing the spread and impact of this virus,” he emphasised.

    The group further said it would focus on disease prevention, with a major focus on testing and diagnostics, protecting and enabling healthcare practitioners and other key workers, who are at the frontline of the fight against this pandemic, enabling patient care and facilities; and to bolster livelihoods and sustenance of the most deserving in society.

    The company also welcomed the efforts by the government and other organisations who have stepped up to this challenge.

    The contribution comes a day after Prime Minister (PM) Imran Khan announced a relief fund to fight the coronavirus epidemic and urged everyone to donate.

    “Prime Minister’s COVID-19 Pandemic Relief Fund-2020 has been set up to help us fight this pandemic. I want everyone to donate towards this fund which will be used to take care of all those who have been made destitute by the lockdown,” he had tweeted.

  • ‘Shoot them dead’: President Duterte warns against violating coronavirus lockdown

    ‘Shoot them dead’: President Duterte warns against violating coronavirus lockdown

    Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte has warned he would order the country’s police and military to shoot dead anyone “who creates trouble” during a month-long lockdown of the island of Luzon enforced to halt the spread of the coronavirus, France 24 reported.

    “Let this be a warning to all. Follow the government at this time because it is critical that we have order,” he said in a late-night televised national address on Wednesday.

    “And do not harm the health workers, the doctors … because that is a serious crime. My orders to the police and the military, if anyone creates trouble, and their lives are in danger: shoot them dead.”

    “Do not intimidate the government. Do not challenge the government. You will lose,” he added in Filipino and English.

    Duterte’s warning came after residents of a slum in Manila’s Quezon City staged a protest along a highway near their shanty houses, claiming they had not received any food packs and other relief supplies since the lockdown began more than two weeks ago.

    Village security officers and police urged the residents to go back to their homes, but they refused, a police report said.

    Police broke up the protest and arrested 20 people, the report added.

    Health authorities in the Philippines have recorded 2,311 cases of COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus as of Wednesday. At least 96 people have died.

  • Google is helping Pakistan fight coronavirus, here is how.

    Google is helping Pakistan fight coronavirus, here is how.

    According to Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) press release, Google has introduced various features and tools to facilitate the operations of telecommunication networks to promote learning and access to authentic information in Pakistan.

    The platform has given the Pakistani government an ad-inventory to disseminate accurate information on time.

    Moreover, Google has shared tips and resources for remote workers and students so that they can improve the quality of work and ensure productivity.

    Google has allowed free access to advance ‘Google Hangout’ which means the users will be able to put 250 participants on audio and video calls so the entire class can attend lectures. The participants can record the lectures and save it in google drive so when they cannot join, they can access the lectures when needed.

    Google has also launched a speech-based reading app “Bolo” — based on machine learning — to help children read aloud confidently, using their voice. The app is available in the Urdu language as well.

    Apart from these tools and resources, they have ensured measures to combat misinformation. Google has also attached ‘SOS Alert” banner with news from mainstream outlets and information from recognised health organization such as the World health organization (WHO) and National Institute of Health (NIH).

    These hubs provide a comprehensive overview of the pandemic, information about its symptoms and measures, as well as current statistics and answers to common questions.

    These necassary measures taken by the company because search interest in COVID-19 has continued to climb across the world. At present, this is the most researched topic in the world so it is necassary to curb fake news and misinformation.

    In addition to launching new features on the search engine, the platform has rolled out a website—available at google.com/covid19 — focused on education, prevention and local resources.

    People can find state-based information, safety and prevention tips, search trends related to COVID-19, and further resources for individuals, educators and businesses.

  • VIDEO: CM Buzdar wants Punjab to beat the world in introducing coronavirus vaccine

    VIDEO: CM Buzdar wants Punjab to beat the world in introducing coronavirus vaccine

    Punjab Chief Minister (CM) Usman Buzdar has said that the province is doing “groundbreaking research” as the global coronavirus pandemic continues to spread and he wants Pakistan to become the first country in the world to introduce vaccination for COVID-19.

    Even the most effective containment strategies have only slowed the spread of the respiratory disease while some 35 companies and academic institutions around the world are racing to create a vaccine that can prevent people from getting sick as COVID-19 leaves around 940,000 people infected globally with at least 47,000 fatalities.

    While the number of confirmed cases in Pakistan stands at 2,252 with at least 32 deaths and 107 recoveries, Buzdar’s Punjab is the worst-hit with 845 infections and Sindh is trailing behind at 709.

    “Pakistan could become the first country to prepare a vaccine for coronavirus with Punjab taking the lead in this regard,” the provincial chief executive said during a press conference in Lahore on Tuesday. “I will assure them [experts] that I will exhaust all available resources for the research.”

    WATCH VIDEO:

    Earlier, the Punjab CM had directed experts to accelerate research activities for the eradication of coronavirus.

    A meeting chaired by the provincial chief executive told that four study groups had been formed and research had been started under the supervision of the University of Health Sciences (UHS).

    CM Buzdar directed the experts to make fruitful efforts to deal with coronavirus as soon as possible. He was informed that a BSL-3 Lab had started working at Jinnah Hospital and Pakistan Kidney and Liver Institute (PKLI).

    The experts briefed the meeting that COVID-19 found in Pakistan was quite different from the coronavirus found in Wuhan and Iran.

  • Britain, France, Germany bypass US sanctions to send medical aid to virus-hit Iran

    Britain, France, Germany bypass US sanctions to send medical aid to virus-hit Iran

    Britain, France and Germany have for the first time used a complex financial system that bypasses United States’ (US) sanctions to send medical aid to Iran, raising hopes of salvaging the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, Telegraph reported.

    The German Foreign Ministry said the medical goods were now in Iran and added that the Instex trade mechanism and its Iranian counterpart would now work on more transactions and on enhancing the system.

    Britain, Germany and France had earlier offered a $5.5 million package to Iran to help fight coronavirus there and said they would also send medical material, including equipment for laboratory tests, protective body suits and gloves.

    Washington’s major European allies opposed the decision by US President Donald Trump in 2018 to abandon the nuclear deal, under which international sanctions on Iran were lifted in return for Tehran accepting curbs on its nuclear programme.

    The European trade vehicle was conceived as a way to help match Iranian oil and gas exports against purchases of EU goods. However, those ambitions have been toned down, with diplomats saying that, realistically, it will be used only for smaller trade, for example of humanitarian products or food.

    The three European powers are shareholders in the Instrument In Support Of Trade Exchanges, or Instex, and hope other states will join later.

  • Old woman dies after refusing ventilator, told doctors to ‘keep this for younger’

    Old woman dies after refusing ventilator, told doctors to ‘keep this for younger’

    A 90-year-old coronavirus patient has died in Belgium after selflessly refusing a ventilator and asking doctors to ‘keep this for younger patients’. 

    Suzanne Hoylaerts from Binkom, near Lubbeek, was hospitalised on March 20 when her condition rapidly weakened after contracting COVID-19. 

    Hoylaerts required medical attention after suffering from a lack of appetite and shortness of breath. She was admitted to hospital where she tested positive for the virus and was placed in isolation where even her daughter was unable to visit. 

    She reportedly told doctors at the hospital: ‘I don’t want to use artificial respiration. Save it for younger patients. I already had a good life.’ 

    There is a global shortage of ventilators, an important equipment to fight against the respiratory disease, amid the coronavirus pandemic.

    Hoylaerts passed away two days after she was hospitalised, on March 22. 

    Her distraught daughter Judith told Dutch newspaper: ‘I can’t say goodbye to her, and I don’t even have a chance to attend her funeral.’ 

    Belgium has reported 705 deaths according to the latest official toll.

  • ‘They made it harder to breathe’: Coronavirus patient from Lahore shares horrifying experience

    ‘They made it harder to breathe’: Coronavirus patient from Lahore shares horrifying experience

    With the country struggling to contain the outbreak of the new coronavirus, horrifying experiences of both suspected and confirmed patients of the COVID-19 have started pouring in as people narrate their ordeals amid the global health crisis.

    In this regard, I reached out to a “recovered” coronavirus patient, who remained admitted to Lahore’s Mayo Hospital for three long weeks.

    Not only did I ask them what it was like to stay away from their family at such a critical time, fearing never getting to see them again, but also about their experience at a rather infamous government facility.

    “Nothing you have heard is untrue. The deplorable condition of the hospital, the initial inattention of the government and slackness of the hospital staff… all these things made headlines because they were true,” said the patient, who asked not to be named.

    They said they had travelled from Abbottabad to Islamabad in the last week of February and later to Lahore following a two-week stay in the federal capital. “I fell sick two days after arriving in Lahore, my hometown. At first, I ignored the symptoms… a mild fever, after all, is quite common when you’ve been travelling back and forth.”

    “But then I started developing other symptoms. I couldn’t stop coughing and [my] fever just didn’t go away,” the patient said, adding that they had already isolated themself as a precautionary measure after returning from Islamabad where the virus was rumoured to be spreading.

    They said they got themself tested from a government facility but the results turned out to be negative and a second test from a different facility proved that they actually had contracted the virus.

    “One suspected patient, two different facilities, two different tests, two different results in two days. Doesn’t make sense, does it?”

    It merits a mention here that the patient hasn’t been the only one to receive two different test results from two different facilities in Lahore. Last month, the wife of a political bigwig had reportedly tested positive at a private facility and later negative at a government facility. Fashion designer Maria B’s cook had also tested negative for coronavirus on March 26, a few days after testing positive at a private laboratory and being admitted to a Lahore hospital.

    According to reports, the federal government is also sceptical of Punjab’s coronavirus testing data. “So far, 13,380 people have been tested for [COVID-19] in Punjab,” Chief Minister (CM) Usman Buzdar tweeted on March 28.

    While according to statistics of the provincial government, the figure jumped to 14,890 on March 30 in Punjab, it doesn’t tally with the data maintained by the National Institute of Health (NIH) that coordinates with all provinces to update it on a daily basis. According to NIH data, only 13,321 tests had been conducted in Punjab till March 28.

    “Mayo [Hospital] was not an option for me, owing to the poor condition it is known to be in for the past several decades. But I had to go there because a doctor in the family advised me to seek treatment at Mayo,” the patient said.

    They added that they had no other option but to listen to their “doctor-friend” since the government had been keeping people in the dark. “I had no idea where else to go or what else to do.”

    The patient then started narrating their experiences from the hospital and shared what their family had to go through due to the Punjab government’s policy of “criminalising patients”.

    “Not only was I admitted after a group of men in hazmat suits picked me up from my residence, but my house was also guarded by police as other family members were home-quarantined.”

    Although Punjab government officials say that such policing is required to arrest the pandemic, many believe such dealings have led to creating panic among citizens.

    “At the hospital, nobody came to check my temperature within the first 24 hours. Hygienic conditions were pathetic at the hospital, there were bloodstains on the floor and walls, clean drinking water was not available and the bedsheets we were being forced to lie on were pitiful.”

    They said given how disgusting the washroom was, going there was like a punishment and it felt like they would get sicker if they stayed at that hospital any more.

    “While things did start getting better with the number of cases in Punjab increasing and media bringing patients’ ordeal to the notice of authorities concerned, there still was a long way to go. Those around me at the hospital and no escape from my dreadful reality made it harder to breathe with infected lungs,” they said.

    “Every passing second added to my anticipation to recover and get back home, or just lose my battle against coronavirus instead of being forced to live in that depressing environment.”

    Internet, they added, “is always a sweet relief”, but the ages-old structure of the hospital with limited access made it nearly impossible to get any signals.

    “I thought things would get better for me and nothing could be as hard as the first week, but it only got worse when people I had seen being brought in, started to get very sick. One of them, a really old patient, even passed due to the staffers’ [alleged] negligence.”

    The patient in question was a 73-year-old, who was seen tied helplessly to his bed in a video on social media. In the hospital’s isolation ward, the patient could be heard asking for medical staff to tend to him, but his hands and feet were tied to the bed.

    The patient was allegedly not given medication, oxygen or adequate attention by the staff, following which he reportedly passed away. Subsequently, Punjab CM Buzdar ordered an investigation into his death.

    “But you cannot put the blame entirely on doctors and other staff members. They too are humans who are being forced to work under extremely poor conditions. Until my second-last day at the hospital, which was last Friday, I had not seen all staffers in the coronavirus ward with proper protective equipment.”

    To a question, the patient said they were extremely grateful to the doctors performing their duties on the frontline in the war on the pandemic, “and to Allah for finally making the provincial government authorities take the matter seriously”.

    “I don’t know how I survived both the infection and my stay at Mayo Hospital. But what matters is that I did,” the patient said while also urging people to stay at home “if not for themselves, for their loved ones who might not be able to survive such an ordeal”.

    At least 2,079 people had contracted the illness by the time this report was filed on Wednesday. The number of infections in Punjab stood at 748 with Sindh trailing behind at 676 cases, 253 infections in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP), 184 in Gilgit-Baltistan (GB), 158 in Balochistan, 54 in Islamabad and six in Azad Jammu & Kashmir (AJK).

    The number of fatalities stood at 27 while 82 recoveries had been reported.

  • No need to wear masks, says World Health Organization

    No need to wear masks, says World Health Organization

    The World Health Organisation (WHO) has reiterated its advice to people to not wear face masks if they were either not infected by the coronavirus or not caring for a patient of the new coronavirus — COVID-19, CNN reported.

    In a media briefing, WHO Emergencies Program Executive Director Dr Mike Ryan said there was “no specific evidence to suggest that the wearing of masks by the mass population has any potential benefit”.

    “In fact, there’s some evidence to suggest the opposite in the misuse of wearing a mask properly or fitting it properly,” he added. “There also is the issue that we have a massive global shortage.”

    Dr Ryan, a former trauma surgeon who has worked very closely with patients during Ebola outbreaks, stressed that people most at risk were those working at the frontline.

    “Frontline health workers […] are exposed to the virus every second of every day. The thought of them not having masks is horrific,” he added.

    Dr Maria Van Kerkhove — an infectious disease expert and the WHO top official’s colleague — echoed Dr Ryan’s comments, saying it was crucial to “prioritize the use of masks for those who need it most”.

    “In the community, we do not recommend the use of wearing masks unless you yourself are sick and as a measure to prevent onward spread from you if you are ill,” Dr Van Kerkhove noted, adding that masks were only suggested for those who were sick and in self-quarantine or those living with coronavirus-positive patients and caring for them.

  • Indian cricketers face intense backlash for backing Shahid Afridi’s coronavirus fund

    Indian cricketers Yuvraj Singh and Harbhajan Singh faced scathing criticism from triggered Indian social media users after they declared support for former Pakistan captain Shahid Afridi’s foundation in its fight against the coronavirus pandemic.

    Afridi’s appeal for donations to help people affected by the deadly virus in Pakistan has had overwhelming support from leading cricketers.

    Harbhajan urged people to contribute in a video message, and called on other cricketers in the two countries to make similar appeals.

    https://twitter.com/harbhajan_singh/status/1244148978326765568?s=20

    “These are testing times, it’s time to look out for each other,” Yuvraj wrote on Twitter in a call for funds.

    https://twitter.com/YUVSTRONG12/status/1244873490303340544?s=20

    While Afridi thanked the two, Indian Twitter users reacted with fury at the support for a rival player who has been a vocal critic of India’s handling of the Kashmir dispute.

    “Do you have any sense?” wrote one Twitter user. “Lost respect” for Harbhajan Singh, added another. “Sorry guys you lost it.”

    Following the hate, Singh clarified that his intention was not to hurt anyone’s feelings and that he remains a true patriot and will always “bleed blue.” Singh’s note was retweeted by Harbhajan.

    https://twitter.com/YUVSTRONG12/status/1245295251385958400?s=20

    India and Pakistan have not played a bilateral cricket series since 2012-2013 and have seen a new peak in tensions over Kashmir, which has been at the centre of two wars between the neighbours since 1947.

    World Cup-winning batsman Yuvraj, who made a return from cancer before finally retiring last year, has also raised money to fight coronavirus through his ‘YouWeCan’ foundation.

    India, which has been under a 21-day lockdown since March 24, has so far confirmed more than 1,600 coronavirus cases and 38 deaths.

  • Two men who lied to wives about going to Bangkok get quarantined by police

    Two men who lied to wives about going to Bangkok get quarantined by police

    We’ve all seen enough Bollywood and Hollywood movies where men lie to their girlfriends or wives about going on a business trip when in fact they are cheating on them with someone else. Well, something similar happened in India recently.

    According to a Twitter user, Abhijit Basak, whose Twitter bio identifies him as the State IT Cell Convenor of BJYM, West Bengal (India), two men got in for trouble when police paid them a visit.

    This is what the tweet read, ‘They told their wives that they were visiting Bangaluru for business and actually visited Bangkok. However, after returning home, Police visited their homes with their travel records and pasted on the gate & explaining to their wives why their husbands need to be quarantined’.

    Things came crumbling down for two men in India when the truth about their vacation was revealed to their wives by the police.

    According to a report in the Indian media, the incident allegedly took place in Ambala. After tracking down their travel history, the police pasted posters that advised everyone to stay away from the member: as they are under quarantine for 14 days. However, twice the posters were torn by the involved party. When the police pasted them for the third time, they were misbehaved with.

    “Posters were placed two or three times outside the house. But they tore. When the team reached for the third time, then misbehaved. Police was given a written complaint, now the police will take action,” the report quoted Dr. Kuldeep Kumar, CMO, Ambala as saying.

    Well, we can certainly say that these men didn’t think they would get busted and how!

    On Twitter, however, people are concerned about the well being of the two and not because of coronavirus.

    https://twitter.com/drmanishgoutam/status/1244570055557316608?s=20