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Pathology of the respiratory system --- Semiology. Diagnosis. Symptomatology --- Infectious diseases. Communicable diseases --- Pneumonia. --- Respiratory Tract Infections. --- Respiratory infections. --- Appareil respiratoire --- Infections --- Respiratory infections --- Respiratory Tract Infections --- Pneumonia --- Respiratory organs --- Respiratory tract infections --- Upper respiratory infections --- Upper respiratory tract infections --- Infection --- Infections, Respiratory --- Infections, Respiratory Tract --- Infections, Upper Respiratory --- Infections, Upper Respiratory Tract --- Respiratory Infections --- Upper Respiratory Infections --- Upper Respiratory Tract Infections --- Infection, Respiratory Tract --- Respiratory Infection, Upper --- Respiratory Tract Infection --- Experimental Lung Inflammation --- Lobar Pneumonia --- Lung Inflammation --- Pneumonia, Lobar --- Pneumonitis --- Pulmonary Inflammation --- Experimental Lung Inflammations --- Inflammation, Experimental Lung --- Inflammation, Lung --- Inflammation, Pulmonary --- Inflammations, Lung --- Inflammations, Pulmonary --- Lobar Pneumonias --- Lung Inflammation, Experimental --- Lung Inflammations --- Lung Inflammations, Experimental --- Pneumonias --- Pneumonias, Lobar --- Pneumonitides --- Pulmonary Inflammations --- Diseases --- Upper Respiratory Tract Infection --- Respiratory System Infections --- Infection, Respiratory System --- Respiratory System Infection
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Microbiology --- Allergy and Immunology --- Immunity --- Infection --- Communicable Diseases --- Communicable diseases --- Microbiologie --- Immunité --- Maladies infectieuses --- Periodicals. --- Périodiques --- Microbiology. --- Allergy and Immunology. --- Immunity. --- Infection. --- Communicable Diseases. --- Communicable diseases. --- Agriculture Sciences --- Health Sciences --- Life Sciences --- Soil Chemistry, Microbiology, Fertility & Fertilizers --- Allergy --- Immunology --- Micro and Molecular Biology --- bacteremia --- pneumonia --- vancomycin --- infection --- mycobacterium --- General microbiology
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Outside back cover : "The COVID-19 outbreak in Wuhan, Hubei, saw great numbers of patients overwhelming the admission capacity of designated infectious diseases hospitals, which in turn led to insufficient medical supplies fulfilling treatment needs. Hence, Zall Foundation proposed the construction of COVID-19 Emergency Hospitals to effectively respond to the surging number of COVID-19 cases. This involved the conversion of existing hospitals that have insufficient, or do not have admission capacities for infectious diseases patients, into emergency hospitals that solely focus on receiving suspected and confirmed COVID-19 cases. From January 30, 2020, Zall Foundation, along with professional medical institutions, reconstructed seven existing professional medical institutions into COVID-19 Emergency Hospitals in less than 10 days. In total, 4,583 wards were provided after renovation, where 2,833 confirmed and suspected COVID-19 patients were cured. The COVID-19 Emergency Hospitals have played an important role in China's epidemic prevention and control by efficiently easing the problems of insufficient ward beds and inadequate admission capacities of infectious diseases hospitals. Based on the experience of construction and operation of the emergency hospitals which are designed in strict adherence to relevant medical standards and regulations, this manual has been compiled by the Zall Foundation. It aims to provide useful reference to the reconstruction of existing hospitals and practice of expanding medical resources for all other regions around the world, to effectively contribute to pandemic control. The manual has been translated into more than 20 languages."
Hygiene. Public health. Protection --- Infectious diseases. Communicable diseases --- Public buildings --- COVID-19 (Disease) --- Hospital buildings --- Hospitals --- Coronavirus infections --- Pneumonia, Viral --- Architecture d'urgence --- Bâtiment hospitalier --- Protection-agents divers --- Organisation de l'espace intérieur --- Design and construction --- Emergency services --- Chine --- COVID-19 --- Hospital Design and Construction --- Hospitals, Isolation --- Emergency Service, Hospital --- Pandemics --- prevention & control --- methods --- method --- utilization --- prevention and control --- COVID-19 - prevention & control --- Hospital Design and Construction - methods --- Hospitals, Isolation - method --- Emergency Service, Hospital - utilization --- Pandemics - prevention and control
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Fangcang (方 舱 en chinois simplifié ; 方 艙 en chinois traditionnel ou fāngcāng en pinyin) signifie "cabine carrée" : ce mot chinois évoque une structure de construction modulaire mobile formée en utilisant une combinaison de divers matériaux solides. Il est emprunté au vocabulaire militaire qui l’utilise pour désigner l’hôpital de campagne. Phonétiquement, il est proche de celui qui désigne en Chinois l'arche de Noé (métaphore utilisée par les médias chinois). Outside back cover : "A novel public health concept, the Fangcang Shelter Hospital was first proposed by Professor Wang Chen, an academician of Chinese Academy of Engineering, in Wuhan, China, in February 2020. While responding to the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) outbreak, medical staff faced the pressing situation of limited medical supplies, which led Professor Wang Chen to the suggestion of converting large-scale public venues such as exhibition centers and indoor stadiums into shelter hospitals to receive large number of patients, as this involved minimum time and monetary costs. The five essential functions of Fangcang Shelter Hospitals (isolation, triage, provision of basic medical care, frequent monitoring and rapid referral, and essential living and social engagement) enable shelter hospitals to receive patients with mild to moderate symptoms of COVID-19, and have the greatest impact on isolating the source of infection and expanding the area's health-care capacity.Two of the first three Fangcang Shelter Hospitals set up in Wuhan were redeveloped by Zall Group Property from existing buildings, while Zall Foundation was responsible for the provision of essential medical supplies and logistical support to facilitate the running of these shelter hospitals. In total, the two shelter hospitals have been instrumental in diagnosing, treating and curing 3663 patients. Under the medical expertise and guidance of Professor Wang Chen, as well as inputs from Zall Foundation's crews who contributed to the design, renovation and operation of these shelter hospitals, this manual encompasses knowledge and experience distilled from the running of these Fangcang Shelter Hospitals. Covering five important aspects, namely the proposal, design, renovation, operation, and logistical support for shelter hospitals, this booklet aims to be a useful reference for other epidemic prevention and control efforts in regions around the world. The manual has been translated into more than 20 languages."
Hygiene. Public health. Protection --- Infectious diseases. Communicable diseases --- Public buildings --- COVID-19 (Disease) --- Hospital buildings --- Coronavirus infections --- Pneumonia, Viral --- Hospitals --- Architecture d'urgence --- Protection-agents divers --- Bâtiment hospitalier --- Organisation de l'espace intérieur --- Design and construction --- Chine --- Pandemics --- Emergency Service, Hospital --- Hospitals, Isolation --- Hospital Design and Construction --- COVID-19 --- prevention and control --- organization & administration --- method --- methods --- prevention & control --- Pandemics - prevention and control --- Emergency Service, Hospital - organization & administration --- Hospitals, Isolation - method --- Hospital Design and Construction - methods --- COVID-19 - prevention & control
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"Elgar Research Agendas outline the future of research in a given area. Leading scholars are given the space to explore their subject in provocative ways and map out the potential directions of travel. They are relevant but also visionary. With contributions from leading experts in the fields of anthropology, communications, disaster studies, economics, epidemiology, Indigenous studies, philosophy and sociology, this expansive book offers a diverse range of social science perspectives on the COVID-19 pandemic, providing critical insights into what a research agenda for COVID-19 and society resembles across different fields of study. This timely Research Agenda investigates what the social sciences can contribute to COVID-19 scholarship, exploring topics such as the impact of the pandemic on women and Indigenous Peoples, ideas behind herd immunity, drivers of vaccine diplomacy, magnification of existing inequalities, and the ethics of vaccine passports. Driven by a particular focus on the causes and consequences of the pandemic, the book considers the opportunities that research into COVID-19 presents, including how such disasters might be mitigated, as well as how we might change the world for the better and carry out our own work differently in the future. Drawing upon numerous critical theories and methodological approaches, this incisive Research Agenda will be an invaluable tool for academics across the social sciences, particularly disaster scholars. Graduate and undergraduate students will benefit from its wealth of insightful contributions from experts working in their respective fields"--
Sociology of health --- COVID-19 (Disease) --- Social medicine. --- Medical care --- Medical sociology --- Medicine --- Medicine, Social --- Public health --- Public welfare --- Sociology --- Medical ethics --- Medical sociologists --- 2019-nCoV disease --- 2019 novel coronavirus disease --- Coronavirus disease-19 --- Coronavirus disease 2019 --- COVID-19 virus disease --- COVID19 (Disease) --- Novel coronavirus disease, 2019 --- SARS coronavirus 2 disease --- SARS-CoV-2 disease --- Coronavirus infections --- Respiratory infections --- Social aspects --- COVID-19 --- COVID-19 (Malaltia) --- Coronavirus 2019 (Malaltia) --- Malaltia COVID-19 --- Malaltia infecciosa per SARS-CoV-2 --- Malaltia infecciosa per coronavirus --- Malaltia per coronavirus 2019 --- Malaltia respiratòria causada pel SARS-CoV-2 --- Pneumònia de Wuhan --- Infeccions per coronavirus --- Pandèmia de COVID-19, 2020 --- -SARS-CoV-2
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