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本帖最后由 joy2022 于 2022-7-20 12:20 编辑
At the same time, we will also invite experts in the field to discuss related scientific developments. This month's theme is "infection medicine", and the classic book we selected is the classic book "The Fourth Virus", which was published by Shang Zhou in 1997 and describes the long-term battle between humans and viruses. getImage Photo Credit: Business Week Publishing The so-called "fourth-level virus" actually refers to the classification of the biosafety level (BSL).
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) classifies biological laboratories used by Image Manipulation Service scientists into grades one to four according to their experimental safety; the fourth grade is the highest level of biosafety. Most of the pathogens that are required to be operated in the fourth-level laboratory are highly dangerous substances, which may cause the operators to contract fatal diseases. Working in the fourth-level isolation virus laboratory, all staff must wear isolation gowns and supply oxygen with life support equipment. Relevant operators also need to undergo rigorous training before it is possible to let you in and out of the experiment. The author of this book is husband and wife Joseph.
McCormick (Joseph B. McCormick) and Susan. The working environment in Susan Fisher-Hoch is one of working with such a highly dangerous virus all day long. McCormick and Susan have worked in the US CDC successively, among which McCormick is a world- renowned authoritative expert on Ebola virus and Lassa virus. As early as 1976, he went to the Republic of Lion Rock to investigate Lassa fever; in order to track the footprint of the Ebola virus, he also went to Say (now the Democratic Republic of Congo) and Sudan, and went door-to-door to inquire and trace potential diseases. suffer. Efforts are being made to gain the trust and cooperation of local residents in order to collect information on this deadly disease as much as possible, to study possible screening and treatment methods, and to prevent the spread of the epidemic.
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