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Full Version: 'Moderate to high' COVID-19 spread in NSW
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They're back.
It’s 4 years n yet never ends.

All kinds of corvid virus will mutate and form a non curable sickness with no medicine or vax to prevent.

The hornet sting 🐝 high fever,boils,hot body.
The world should just stop stirring covid and move on...thr pandemic is over....I never wear mask for 1 year liao still never get sick.
(26-11-2023, 11:53 AM)theold Wrote: [ -> ]https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-11-23/n.../103132048
Some people suffering with severe cases of COVID-19 will show signs of kidney damage, even those who had no underlying kidney problems before they were infected with the coronavirus. Signs of kidney problems in patients with COVID-19 include high levels of protein or blood in the urine and abnormal blood work.

Studies indicate more than 30% of patients hospitalized with COVID-19 develop kidney injury, and more than 50% of patients in the intensive care unit with kidney injury may require dialysis. Sperati says early in the pandemic, some hospitals were running short on machines and sterile fluids needed to perform dialysis.

“As general treatments for patients with COVID-19 have improved, the rates of dialysis have decreased. This has helped to alleviate shortages, although intermittent supply chain disruptions remain a concern.

“Many patients with severe COVID-19 are those with co-existing, chronic conditions, including high blood pressure and diabetes. Both of these increase the risk of kidney disease,” he says.

But Sperati and other doctors are also seeing kidney damage in people who did not have kidney problems before they got infected with the virus.
(27-11-2023, 10:59 AM)Tee tiong huat Wrote: [ -> ]Some people suffering with severe cases of COVID-19 will show signs of kidney damage, even those who had no underlying kidney problems before they were infected with the coronavirus. Signs of kidney problems in patients with COVID-19 include high levels of protein or blood in the urine and abnormal blood work.

Studies indicate more than 30% of patients hospitalized with COVID-19 develop kidney injury, and more than 50% of patients in the intensive care unit with kidney injury may require dialysis. Sperati says early in the pandemic, some hospitals were running short on machines and sterile fluids needed to perform dialysis.

“As general treatments for patients with COVID-19 have improved, the rates of dialysis have decreased. This has helped to alleviate shortages, although intermittent supply chain disruptions remain a concern.

“Many patients with severe COVID-19 are those with co-existing, chronic conditions, including high blood pressure and diabetes. Both of these increase the risk of kidney disease,” he says.

But Sperati and other doctors are also seeing kidney damage in people who did not have kidney problems before they got infected with the virus.

https://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/health/c...by-covid19 (fyi reading)😍
(26-11-2023, 12:32 PM)Lukongsimi Wrote: [ -> ]It’s 4 years n yet never ends.

All kinds of corvid virus will mutate and form a non curable sickness with no medicine or vax to prevent.

The hornet sting 🐝 high fever,boils,hot body.

By 2024?.
"Aussie Virus" ?

Will Albany Gov point finger at China now ?