Tomenable
Well-known member
- Messages
- 5,445
- Reaction score
- 1,353
- Points
- 113
- Location
- Poland
- Ethnic group
- Polish
- Y-DNA haplogroup
- R1b-L617
- mtDNA haplogroup
- W6a
Do you know Stanisław Pietrzak who cooperated with Bonnie Schrack in research on A haplogroup?:
https://www-tropie-tarnow-opoka-org..._sch=http&_x_tr_sl=pl&_x_tr_tl=en&_x_tr_hl=pl - Pietrzak's website
He is warning about some "Monkey Pox" new pandemics in the link below:
https://slawomirambroziak-pl.transl...ic=5527.0&_x_tr_sl=pl&_x_tr_tl=en&_x_tr_hl=pl - stanp = Stanisław Pietrzak
^^^ Quote:
"Genetics and the so-called monkey pox
There are no results of studies yet on the relationship between this new pandemic and the genetic haplotype of disease hosts.
So there is an open question about the severe course of the disease hatlotype, how is such a hatlotype diagnosed in COVID-19
WHO warns: Monkey pox may spread in Europe with summer events
based on: comp. Andrzej Mężyński May 20, 2022, 18:58
"I am afraid that the spread of monkey pox in Europe may accelerate with summer events and festivals" - warned the director of the World Health Organization (WHO) for Europe, Hans Kluge.
The summer season is beginning in Europe, accompanied by mass gatherings, festivals and events, I am afraid that the transmission (monkey pox - PAP) may accelerate, as the cases currently detected concern people engaging in sexual activity, and the symptoms (of this disease) are for unknown to many people, Kluge said in a statement posted on the WHO website.
'Monkey pox is much more difficult to transmit than Covid-19. But anyone can get sick '
What is monkey pox?
Monkey pox is a rare zoonotic viral disease that usually occurs in West and Central Africa. Symptoms include fever, headache, and a skin rash that begins on the face and spreads to the rest of the body. Symptoms usually disappear after two or three weeks, reports the WHO. The virus does not spread easily between people, and
infection most often occurs through close contact with an infected person's body fluids, including through sexual intercourse.
Recent cases of infection are atypical in several respects, writes Kluge. First, they occur in people who have not previously traveled to African countries where monkey pox is an endemic disease.
Second, most infections were found among men who had sex with other men.
Thirdly, the recent emergence of infections in different countries suggests that the virus has been spreading around the world for some time , calculated the director of the European branch of WHO.
People suspected of having monkey pox should be examined and isolated from the moment the first symptoms appear, Kluge noted. He added that WHO is working closely with the authorities of the countries where the disease has appeared to investigate its sources and prevent further transmission of the virus."
https://www-tropie-tarnow-opoka-org..._sch=http&_x_tr_sl=pl&_x_tr_tl=en&_x_tr_hl=pl - Pietrzak's website
He is warning about some "Monkey Pox" new pandemics in the link below:
https://slawomirambroziak-pl.transl...ic=5527.0&_x_tr_sl=pl&_x_tr_tl=en&_x_tr_hl=pl - stanp = Stanisław Pietrzak
^^^ Quote:
"Genetics and the so-called monkey pox
There are no results of studies yet on the relationship between this new pandemic and the genetic haplotype of disease hosts.
So there is an open question about the severe course of the disease hatlotype, how is such a hatlotype diagnosed in COVID-19
WHO warns: Monkey pox may spread in Europe with summer events
based on: comp. Andrzej Mężyński May 20, 2022, 18:58
"I am afraid that the spread of monkey pox in Europe may accelerate with summer events and festivals" - warned the director of the World Health Organization (WHO) for Europe, Hans Kluge.
The summer season is beginning in Europe, accompanied by mass gatherings, festivals and events, I am afraid that the transmission (monkey pox - PAP) may accelerate, as the cases currently detected concern people engaging in sexual activity, and the symptoms (of this disease) are for unknown to many people, Kluge said in a statement posted on the WHO website.
'Monkey pox is much more difficult to transmit than Covid-19. But anyone can get sick '
What is monkey pox?
Monkey pox is a rare zoonotic viral disease that usually occurs in West and Central Africa. Symptoms include fever, headache, and a skin rash that begins on the face and spreads to the rest of the body. Symptoms usually disappear after two or three weeks, reports the WHO. The virus does not spread easily between people, and
infection most often occurs through close contact with an infected person's body fluids, including through sexual intercourse.
Recent cases of infection are atypical in several respects, writes Kluge. First, they occur in people who have not previously traveled to African countries where monkey pox is an endemic disease.
Second, most infections were found among men who had sex with other men.
Thirdly, the recent emergence of infections in different countries suggests that the virus has been spreading around the world for some time , calculated the director of the European branch of WHO.
People suspected of having monkey pox should be examined and isolated from the moment the first symptoms appear, Kluge noted. He added that WHO is working closely with the authorities of the countries where the disease has appeared to investigate its sources and prevent further transmission of the virus."