When Keiji awoke from sleep for a year, he could not fully believe that the whole view appeared in front of him; the flames around him cried, ascending from the ground under the floor I was furious with blood. A heavy cockroach left his lips, and he just did more than try to sleep in a flash. Suddenly a big spear from the right hit his sleepy shape. From the left side away from the thrust on the other side, without leaving a momentary waste, Keiji.
In that month, Dr. Keiji Fukuda who was the Director of Epidemiology at the Center for Disease Control and Prevention in the US, was in San Francisco when his telephone rang. For a while, Mr. Fukuda could not understand why colleagues told him why children died worldwide. Ultimately, seasonal influenza has hundreds of thousands of dead each year. The seriousness of the situation will soon appear. While he was alive, the nurse took saliva samples from Lynn Haika's throat. The influenza test was positive, but negative for all known human strains. This is new.
The main suspects are familiar with it, but there are problems when preparing to deal with H7N9 on a global scale. As mentioned by Dr. Keiji Fukuda, director of epidemiology at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, in recent years, humans are "hidden" in epidemics. The SARS in 2002, the swine flu in 2009, and the Ebola virus in 2014 did not develop into a comprehensive outbreak through a combination of preparation, rapid action, and bald luck. So there are few reference points that can provide clues and models to solve the painful world of today's fatal pandemic.
In a virtual press conference on the global epidemic of influenza in May 2009, Dr. Keiji Fukuda, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Health, Safety and Environment at WHO, stated, "The easiest way to think about trends is to say that it is a global epidemic.You may ask yourself:" What is the global pandemic? "The global pandemic is our Means to see the spread of the pharmacy ... Then we see activity of diseases other than virus infection. The World Health Organization issued a document on guidance on pandemic measures in 1999. This was revised in 2005 and February 2009, and is summarized in a memorandum entitled the main explanation and stage of the WHO pandemic stage. The 2009 revision, including the definition of epidemic and its declared stages, ended in February 2009. In 2009, the H1N1 influenza virus did not appear at the present time. It is not listed in the file