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Kathmandu, Nepal – The Sukraraj Hospital for Tropical and Infectious Diseases in the Nepalese capital Kathmandu is packed – so crowded that in many cases the two patients share a bed – the second wave of COVID-19 floods the country’s health infrastructure.
Health experts and primary care staff say the situation is “almost apocalyptic” because hospital beds and oxygen are scarce, as the national vaccination campaign is almost interrupted and the death toll is so high that massive incinerations are taking place. held.
“We have been caring for patients in every corner of the hospital premises. We are also using the garage to accommodate as many patients as possible, ”said Beli Poudel, a nurse at Sukraraje.
Over the past one and a half years or so, the pandemic has changed many things in our lives. It may continue to bring in more changes as the consequences of the pandemic unfold. Such change will not only be due to the devastating economic impact of the pandemic but also because of the geo-political dynamics that will emerge from the crisis.
One of the important ramifications of the pandemic is the change in the world order. The pandemic has emphasised the need for a stronger global community. The need for a meaningful globalisation has been felt much more than even before. However, the spirit of globalisation became weaker much before the outbreak of the pandemic. A number of shifts were observed in the global geo-political order with implications for the global economy as well. Countries were resorting to protectionism increasingly in an attempt to save their domestic economies. There were increasingly more restrictions on movements of goods and services even though in a globalised
only temporarily, and the strengthening of vaccines combined with the previous stimulus will enhance recovery.
Canada lost more than 200,000 jobs last month with accumulated losses in industries such as retail and hospitality and entertainment caused by public health cuts. Employment fell by 207,000 in April, meanwhile
unemployment rate it rose 0.6 percentage points to 8.1 percent, Statistics Canada said.
Passengers from England will be allowed to re-embark foreign holidays at the end of this month, but they can only visit a few destinations without having to return to quarantine. Transport Secretary Grant Shapps said
Portugal, Gibraltar and Israel it would be among the 12 countries and territories with the least reduced “green list”.
Sinopharm is the first COVID jab developed by a non-Western country to gain the support of the World Heath Organization.
The World Health Organization has approved the emergency use of the COVID-19 vaccine manufactured by Sinopharm of China.
On Friday, the decision was made by the WHO technical advisory team, the first in China to open Sinopharm’s offer to join the UN-sponsored COVAX program in the coming weeks or months, and can be distributed to UNICEF Children’s Agency and WHO in the Americas. regional office.
Aside from the efficiency numbers, the Chinese manufacturer has published very little public data about its two vaccines – one developed by the Beijing Institute of Organic Products and the other by the Wuhan Institute of Organic Products -.