K
Khách

Hãy nhập câu hỏi của bạn vào đây, nếu là tài khoản VIP, bạn sẽ được ưu tiên trả lời.

26 tháng 2 2022

continues 

5 tháng 4 2022
Bệnh vi-rút corona (COVID-19)  
5 tháng 4 2022

??/

17 tháng 1 2022

C1: I am interested in doing volunteer work during the Covid19 pandemic

C2: I am keen on doing volunteer work during the Covid19 pandemic

C3: I am fond of doing volunteer work during the Covid19 pandemic

17 tháng 1 2022

I am interested in doing volunteer work during the Covid-19 pandemic

15 tháng 7 2021
Confronted with the prospect of continued waves of COVID-19 infections, at least until an effective vaccine is readily available, countries around the world are constantly optimizing their policy response to the pandemic. Initially undertaking full-fledged national lockdowns, governments are increasingly seeking more selective and localized public health interventions. Notable amongst these countries are Australia (Melbourne), Spain (Cataluña), and China (Beijing) with their recent focus on highly targeted interventions. Can such an approach be effective in controlling the pandemic? Can it help minimize the economic costs for businesses and people?

For policymakers, answering these questions in near-real time is difficult due to the delay in gathering economic, social, and financial information through conventional means. Large technology companies have made available human mobility data that makes it possible to monitor the impact of the COVID-19 interventions in near real-time worldwide. In this blog, we will illustrate the use of this data to measure impact here in Vietnam, which was recently hit by a second wave of COVID-19 infections.

On July 24, after 99 days of zero community-transmitted COVID-19 infections, a 57 year-old man tested positive in Danang, a major city in central Vietnam with close to 1.5 million inhabitants. Within three weeks, almost 600 people were infected, over 25 deaths recorded. Most of these cases remained concentrated in and around Danang. Authorities were quick to respond to the outbreak: the city was swiftly shut down with an estimated 80,000 tourists evacuated, most hotels and businesses closed, and nearly all domestic and international flights cancelled. Importantly, this approach differed from the policy in April, when a state of emergency was adopted nationwide for three weeks. This time in Danang, Vietnamese authorities opted to implement a strict but localized lockdown instead.

Kids are getting more bored by the day. We wish we could go back to school to see our friends. But some of us are also really scared about getting the coronavirus, and we don’t want our friends and family to get it either.

Some are having fun with their parents and their brothers and sisters, but most are missing their teachers, their friends and their normal lives. And a lot are frustrated about missing out on things like spring break, field trips and graduation.

Same. Home-school is definitely boring, but I really hope we can make it through this safely and return to how things used to be.

But it also gives me time to work and complete assignments on my time throughout the day. Rather than sit in school for six hours, I can break up the work throughout the day and use the extra time to work around the house or go outside.

I still miss my school.I hope things will become back normal again.

6 tháng 6 2021

câu này bn đăng lại qua bên môn anh nhé 

6 tháng 6 2021

This is Math. IF YOU WANT GO TO ENGLISH TO ASK.

7 tháng 1 2023

1 homeless

2 elderly

7 tháng 1 2023

1. Many people have become _homeless_ because of the Covid-19 pandemic. (home).

2. We read newspapers to the_elderly_  at a nursing home last weekend. (old).

11 tháng 9 2021

on

down

11 tháng 9 2021

on

down