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  • By Dinesh Dubey in India A newborn baby weighing just 400 grams has survived after her premature birth and gained normalcy after completing a six-month-long clinical course, with her parents and doctors having struggled hard to keep her alive and healthy. The girl was discharged from the hospital in Udaipur on Thursday. Neonatologist Sunil Janged, who led a team of doctors and nursing staff for ensuring the girl's incredible survival, claimed that she was the smallest newborn baby to survive in India and South Asia. The last reported such survival was a baby, Rajni, weighing 450 grams, at Mohali in 2012. The girl, named Manushi by the nursing staff of Vivanta Children's Hospital, was born to a couple married for 35 years. When her mother’s blood pressure became uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed absence of blood flow to the foetus, a caesarean section was conducted on her on June 15, 2017. Baby Seeta is the smallest baby ever to survive not in India but also in South Asia. Doctors calls her "our miracle baby", saying: "She’s just fought and fought and fought against all the odds. But she’s made it." Born to a couple married for 35 years, when her blood pressure was uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed fetoplacental insufficiency [ absent blood flow to fetus. So she was taken up for emergency caesarean section on June 15,2017. Baby Seeta weighed just 400 grams and measured just 8.6 inches when she was born, her minuscule feet only slightly bigger than a fingernail. She was not breathing when she was born. But the couple decided to fight to keep her alive. “When the baby was born, we were uncertain of what could happen,” Dr Sunil Janged, Chief Neonatologist said. The baby required artificial breathing support to regularize her breathing and then she was quickly transferred to Jivanta neonatal ICU. The baby was managed & looked after at Jivanta Neonatal ICU under precise care
    MEGA144195_002.jpg
  • By Dinesh Dubey in India A newborn baby weighing just 400 grams has survived after her premature birth and gained normalcy after completing a six-month-long clinical course, with her parents and doctors having struggled hard to keep her alive and healthy. The girl was discharged from the hospital in Udaipur on Thursday. Neonatologist Sunil Janged, who led a team of doctors and nursing staff for ensuring the girl's incredible survival, claimed that she was the smallest newborn baby to survive in India and South Asia. The last reported such survival was a baby, Rajni, weighing 450 grams, at Mohali in 2012. The girl, named Manushi by the nursing staff of Vivanta Children's Hospital, was born to a couple married for 35 years. When her mother’s blood pressure became uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed absence of blood flow to the foetus, a caesarean section was conducted on her on June 15, 2017. Baby Seeta is the smallest baby ever to survive not in India but also in South Asia. Doctors calls her "our miracle baby", saying: "She’s just fought and fought and fought against all the odds. But she’s made it." Born to a couple married for 35 years, when her blood pressure was uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed fetoplacental insufficiency [ absent blood flow to fetus. So she was taken up for emergency caesarean section on June 15,2017. Baby Seeta weighed just 400 grams and measured just 8.6 inches when she was born, her minuscule feet only slightly bigger than a fingernail. She was not breathing when she was born. But the couple decided to fight to keep her alive. “When the baby was born, we were uncertain of what could happen,” Dr Sunil Janged, Chief Neonatologist said. The baby required artificial breathing support to regularize her breathing and then she was quickly transferred to Jivanta neonatal ICU. The baby was managed & looked after at Jivanta Neonatal ICU under precise care
    MEGA144195_006.jpg
  • By Dinesh Dubey in India A newborn baby weighing just 400 grams has survived after her premature birth and gained normalcy after completing a six-month-long clinical course, with her parents and doctors having struggled hard to keep her alive and healthy. The girl was discharged from the hospital in Udaipur on Thursday. Neonatologist Sunil Janged, who led a team of doctors and nursing staff for ensuring the girl's incredible survival, claimed that she was the smallest newborn baby to survive in India and South Asia. The last reported such survival was a baby, Rajni, weighing 450 grams, at Mohali in 2012. The girl, named Manushi by the nursing staff of Vivanta Children's Hospital, was born to a couple married for 35 years. When her mother’s blood pressure became uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed absence of blood flow to the foetus, a caesarean section was conducted on her on June 15, 2017. Baby Seeta is the smallest baby ever to survive not in India but also in South Asia. Doctors calls her "our miracle baby", saying: "She’s just fought and fought and fought against all the odds. But she’s made it." Born to a couple married for 35 years, when her blood pressure was uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed fetoplacental insufficiency [ absent blood flow to fetus. So she was taken up for emergency caesarean section on June 15,2017. Baby Seeta weighed just 400 grams and measured just 8.6 inches when she was born, her minuscule feet only slightly bigger than a fingernail. She was not breathing when she was born. But the couple decided to fight to keep her alive. “When the baby was born, we were uncertain of what could happen,” Dr Sunil Janged, Chief Neonatologist said. The baby required artificial breathing support to regularize her breathing and then she was quickly transferred to Jivanta neonatal ICU. The baby was managed & looked after at Jivanta Neonatal ICU under precise care
    MEGA144195_004.jpg
  • By Dinesh Dubey in India A newborn baby weighing just 400 grams has survived after her premature birth and gained normalcy after completing a six-month-long clinical course, with her parents and doctors having struggled hard to keep her alive and healthy. The girl was discharged from the hospital in Udaipur on Thursday. Neonatologist Sunil Janged, who led a team of doctors and nursing staff for ensuring the girl's incredible survival, claimed that she was the smallest newborn baby to survive in India and South Asia. The last reported such survival was a baby, Rajni, weighing 450 grams, at Mohali in 2012. The girl, named Manushi by the nursing staff of Vivanta Children's Hospital, was born to a couple married for 35 years. When her mother’s blood pressure became uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed absence of blood flow to the foetus, a caesarean section was conducted on her on June 15, 2017. Baby Seeta is the smallest baby ever to survive not in India but also in South Asia. Doctors calls her "our miracle baby", saying: "She’s just fought and fought and fought against all the odds. But she’s made it." Born to a couple married for 35 years, when her blood pressure was uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed fetoplacental insufficiency [ absent blood flow to fetus. So she was taken up for emergency caesarean section on June 15,2017. Baby Seeta weighed just 400 grams and measured just 8.6 inches when she was born, her minuscule feet only slightly bigger than a fingernail. She was not breathing when she was born. But the couple decided to fight to keep her alive. “When the baby was born, we were uncertain of what could happen,” Dr Sunil Janged, Chief Neonatologist said. The baby required artificial breathing support to regularize her breathing and then she was quickly transferred to Jivanta neonatal ICU. The baby was managed & looked after at Jivanta Neonatal ICU under precise care
    MEGA144195_008.jpg
  • By Dinesh Dubey in India A newborn baby weighing just 400 grams has survived after her premature birth and gained normalcy after completing a six-month-long clinical course, with her parents and doctors having struggled hard to keep her alive and healthy. The girl was discharged from the hospital in Udaipur on Thursday. Neonatologist Sunil Janged, who led a team of doctors and nursing staff for ensuring the girl's incredible survival, claimed that she was the smallest newborn baby to survive in India and South Asia. The last reported such survival was a baby, Rajni, weighing 450 grams, at Mohali in 2012. The girl, named Manushi by the nursing staff of Vivanta Children's Hospital, was born to a couple married for 35 years. When her mother’s blood pressure became uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed absence of blood flow to the foetus, a caesarean section was conducted on her on June 15, 2017. Baby Seeta is the smallest baby ever to survive not in India but also in South Asia. Doctors calls her "our miracle baby", saying: "She’s just fought and fought and fought against all the odds. But she’s made it." Born to a couple married for 35 years, when her blood pressure was uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed fetoplacental insufficiency [ absent blood flow to fetus. So she was taken up for emergency caesarean section on June 15,2017. Baby Seeta weighed just 400 grams and measured just 8.6 inches when she was born, her minuscule feet only slightly bigger than a fingernail. She was not breathing when she was born. But the couple decided to fight to keep her alive. “When the baby was born, we were uncertain of what could happen,” Dr Sunil Janged, Chief Neonatologist said. The baby required artificial breathing support to regularize her breathing and then she was quickly transferred to Jivanta neonatal ICU. The baby was managed & looked after at Jivanta Neonatal ICU under precise care
    MEGA144195_005.jpg
  • By Dinesh Dubey in India A newborn baby weighing just 400 grams has survived after her premature birth and gained normalcy after completing a six-month-long clinical course, with her parents and doctors having struggled hard to keep her alive and healthy. The girl was discharged from the hospital in Udaipur on Thursday. Neonatologist Sunil Janged, who led a team of doctors and nursing staff for ensuring the girl's incredible survival, claimed that she was the smallest newborn baby to survive in India and South Asia. The last reported such survival was a baby, Rajni, weighing 450 grams, at Mohali in 2012. The girl, named Manushi by the nursing staff of Vivanta Children's Hospital, was born to a couple married for 35 years. When her mother’s blood pressure became uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed absence of blood flow to the foetus, a caesarean section was conducted on her on June 15, 2017. Baby Seeta is the smallest baby ever to survive not in India but also in South Asia. Doctors calls her "our miracle baby", saying: "She’s just fought and fought and fought against all the odds. But she’s made it." Born to a couple married for 35 years, when her blood pressure was uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed fetoplacental insufficiency [ absent blood flow to fetus. So she was taken up for emergency caesarean section on June 15,2017. Baby Seeta weighed just 400 grams and measured just 8.6 inches when she was born, her minuscule feet only slightly bigger than a fingernail. She was not breathing when she was born. But the couple decided to fight to keep her alive. “When the baby was born, we were uncertain of what could happen,” Dr Sunil Janged, Chief Neonatologist said. The baby required artificial breathing support to regularize her breathing and then she was quickly transferred to Jivanta neonatal ICU. The baby was managed & looked after at Jivanta Neonatal ICU under precise care
    MEGA144195_007.jpg
  • By Dinesh Dubey in India A newborn baby weighing just 400 grams has survived after her premature birth and gained normalcy after completing a six-month-long clinical course, with her parents and doctors having struggled hard to keep her alive and healthy. The girl was discharged from the hospital in Udaipur on Thursday. Neonatologist Sunil Janged, who led a team of doctors and nursing staff for ensuring the girl's incredible survival, claimed that she was the smallest newborn baby to survive in India and South Asia. The last reported such survival was a baby, Rajni, weighing 450 grams, at Mohali in 2012. The girl, named Manushi by the nursing staff of Vivanta Children's Hospital, was born to a couple married for 35 years. When her mother’s blood pressure became uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed absence of blood flow to the foetus, a caesarean section was conducted on her on June 15, 2017. Baby Seeta is the smallest baby ever to survive not in India but also in South Asia. Doctors calls her "our miracle baby", saying: "She’s just fought and fought and fought against all the odds. But she’s made it." Born to a couple married for 35 years, when her blood pressure was uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed fetoplacental insufficiency [ absent blood flow to fetus. So she was taken up for emergency caesarean section on June 15,2017. Baby Seeta weighed just 400 grams and measured just 8.6 inches when she was born, her minuscule feet only slightly bigger than a fingernail. She was not breathing when she was born. But the couple decided to fight to keep her alive. “When the baby was born, we were uncertain of what could happen,” Dr Sunil Janged, Chief Neonatologist said. The baby required artificial breathing support to regularize her breathing and then she was quickly transferred to Jivanta neonatal ICU. The baby was managed & looked after at Jivanta Neonatal ICU under precise care
    MEGA144195_009.jpg
  • By Dinesh Dubey in India A newborn baby weighing just 400 grams has survived after her premature birth and gained normalcy after completing a six-month-long clinical course, with her parents and doctors having struggled hard to keep her alive and healthy. The girl was discharged from the hospital in Udaipur on Thursday. Neonatologist Sunil Janged, who led a team of doctors and nursing staff for ensuring the girl's incredible survival, claimed that she was the smallest newborn baby to survive in India and South Asia. The last reported such survival was a baby, Rajni, weighing 450 grams, at Mohali in 2012. The girl, named Manushi by the nursing staff of Vivanta Children's Hospital, was born to a couple married for 35 years. When her mother’s blood pressure became uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed absence of blood flow to the foetus, a caesarean section was conducted on her on June 15, 2017. Baby Seeta is the smallest baby ever to survive not in India but also in South Asia. Doctors calls her "our miracle baby", saying: "She’s just fought and fought and fought against all the odds. But she’s made it." Born to a couple married for 35 years, when her blood pressure was uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed fetoplacental insufficiency [ absent blood flow to fetus. So she was taken up for emergency caesarean section on June 15,2017. Baby Seeta weighed just 400 grams and measured just 8.6 inches when she was born, her minuscule feet only slightly bigger than a fingernail. She was not breathing when she was born. But the couple decided to fight to keep her alive. “When the baby was born, we were uncertain of what could happen,” Dr Sunil Janged, Chief Neonatologist said. The baby required artificial breathing support to regularize her breathing and then she was quickly transferred to Jivanta neonatal ICU. The baby was managed & looked after at Jivanta Neonatal ICU under precise care
    MEGA144195_003.jpg
  • By Dinesh Dubey in India A newborn baby weighing just 400 grams has survived after her premature birth and gained normalcy after completing a six-month-long clinical course, with her parents and doctors having struggled hard to keep her alive and healthy. The girl was discharged from the hospital in Udaipur on Thursday. Neonatologist Sunil Janged, who led a team of doctors and nursing staff for ensuring the girl's incredible survival, claimed that she was the smallest newborn baby to survive in India and South Asia. The last reported such survival was a baby, Rajni, weighing 450 grams, at Mohali in 2012. The girl, named Manushi by the nursing staff of Vivanta Children's Hospital, was born to a couple married for 35 years. When her mother’s blood pressure became uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed absence of blood flow to the foetus, a caesarean section was conducted on her on June 15, 2017. Baby Seeta is the smallest baby ever to survive not in India but also in South Asia. Doctors calls her "our miracle baby", saying: "She’s just fought and fought and fought against all the odds. But she’s made it." Born to a couple married for 35 years, when her blood pressure was uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed fetoplacental insufficiency [ absent blood flow to fetus. So she was taken up for emergency caesarean section on June 15,2017. Baby Seeta weighed just 400 grams and measured just 8.6 inches when she was born, her minuscule feet only slightly bigger than a fingernail. She was not breathing when she was born. But the couple decided to fight to keep her alive. “When the baby was born, we were uncertain of what could happen,” Dr Sunil Janged, Chief Neonatologist said. The baby required artificial breathing support to regularize her breathing and then she was quickly transferred to Jivanta neonatal ICU. The baby was managed & looked after at Jivanta Neonatal ICU under precise care
    MEGA144195_001.jpg
  • 164 Bangladeshis stranded in India due to lockdown have been brought back by a special flight of US-Bangla Airlines landed at Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, April 20, 2020. Due to lockdown in India over COVID-19 situation, the Bangladeshis went medical and business purposes got stuck in the country. India allowed special flights when Bangladesh took the initiative to bring these citizens back. Photo by Suvra Kanti Das/ABACAPRESS.COM
    728262_030.jpg
  • 164 Bangladeshis stranded in India due to lockdown have been brought back by a special flight of US-Bangla Airlines landed at Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, April 20, 2020. Due to lockdown in India over COVID-19 situation, the Bangladeshis went medical and business purposes got stuck in the country. India allowed special flights when Bangladesh took the initiative to bring these citizens back. Photo by Suvra Kanti Das/ABACAPRESS.COM
    728262_021.jpg
  • April 7, 2020, Dhaka, Bangladesh: With great respect and care a team of gravediggers and health workers, dressed in full protective suits, say final words and bury the body of coronavirus victim, JALAL SAIFUR RAHMAN, the director of the Banglandish Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC). Jalal, a director of Bangladesh government’s main anti-graft body, had tested positive for COVID-19 seven days ago. Dr. Shihab Uddin, superintendent of Kuwait Bangladesh Friendship Government Hospital, one of the dedicated hospitals for treating coronavirus-infected patients in Bangladesh, said: “He was in a intensive care unit of the hospital and last late night his blood pressure fell down rapidly. We tried our level best. But today [Monday] at 7.30 a.m. he died.” Bangladesh on Monday, reported 29 new coronavirus patients and four new deaths, raising the total number of confirmed cases in the country to 123 and death toll to 13. Since appearing in Wuhan, China last December, the novel coronavirus has spread to at least 183 countries and regions, killed scores and infected millions. (Credit Image: © Sultan Mahmud Mukut/SOPA Images via ZUMA Wire)
    20200406_zap_d117_007.jpg
  • February 2, 2020, Zouping, Binzhou Township, Shandong Province, China: Overwhelmed with emotion, nurses hug. Hands and hugs as nurses comfort each other. They are part of a eight nurse and doctors team, taking care of patients who have new coronavirus COVID-19 pneumonia, in the isolation ward in Zouping People's Republic Hostipal with a empty bed behind them. (Credit Image: © Dong Naide/TPG via ZUMA Press)
    20200202_zaa_t49_005.jpg
  • February 2, 2020, Zouping, Binzhou Township, Shandong Province, China: Overwhelmed with emotion, nurses hug. Hands and hugs as nurses comfort each other. They are part of a eight nurse and doctors team, taking care of patients who have new coronavirus COVID-19 pneumonia, in the isolation ward in Zouping People's Republic Hostipal with a empty bed behind them. (Credit Image: © Dong Naide/TPG via ZUMA Press)
    20200202_zan_z03_005.jpg
  • March 24, 2020, Washington, District of Columbia, USA: Two pedestrians walk on a nearly empty street. U.S. Vice President Pence said on Monday that 313,000 coronavirus tests have been completed in the United States, and more than 41,000 tests were positive. (Credit Image: © Xinhua via ZUMA Wire)
    20200323_zaf_x99_446.jpg
  • March 23, 2020, Manchester, United Kingdom: Two people wearing face masks as preventive measure against the COVID-19 coronavirus walk through a rather empty Piccadilly train station. Household isolation, social distancing, working from home, avoidance of public gatherings have been recommended while public transport has been reduced as part of protective measures to reduce the spread of the disease in the UK. (Credit Image: © Andy Barton/SOPA Images via ZUMA Wire)
    20200323_zaa_s197_021.jpg
  • March 23, 2020, New York, New York, USA: Virtually empty 42nd street in Manhattan on first day of Stay at Home executive order. (Credit Image: © Lev Radin/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20200323_zaa_p133_135.jpg
  • March 20, 2020, St. Petersburg, Florida, USA: KRISTEN SHEPHERD kisses her husband TODD BERMAN as the couple gets married on the steps of City Hall with Mayor RICK KRISEMAN officiating on Friday. Coronavirus forced Museum of Fine Arts executive director Kristen Shepherd to cancel her original wedding plans, So she reached out to Mayor Kriseman to see if he would officiate her marriage to Todd Berman on the steps of City Hall, with less than 10 people in attendance and all standing six feet apart. (Credit Image: © Dirk Shadd/Tampa Bay Times via ZUMA Wire)
    20200320_zan_s70_034.jpg
  • March 17, 2020, Brussels, Belgium: Belgian Prime Minister SOPHIE WILMES (C) addresses a near-empty Parliament, with only the Vice-Prime Ministers and the Group Leaders present, during a plenary session of the chamber at the federal parliament. It is expected that the Prime Minister will ask a vote of confidence for her minority government in current affairs, so that the government can take the necessary decisions to fight the corona crisis more easily. (Credit Image: © Dirk Waem/Belga via ZUMA Press)
    20200317_zia_bg4_023.jpg
  • March 17, 2020, Washington, District of Columbia, USA: A man jogs past a quiet and empty US Capitol as the United States deals with the COVID-19 pandemic. The House is in recess while the Senate remains in session during this deadly health crisis. (Credit Image: © Rod Lamkey/CNP via ZUMA Wire)
    20200317_zaa_s152_121.jpg
  • March 10, 2020, Venice, Italy: A waiter walks around an empty restaurant at St. Marcus square. All of Italy is being placed on lockdown due to coronavirus. (Credit Image: © Mirco Toniolo/Ropi via ZUMA Press)
    20200311_zaf_r103_004.jpg
  • April 4, 2017 - Hatay, Hatay Province, Turkey - A young boy being rushed on a gurney, to get help after being a part of a supposed nerve gas attack (possibly the powerful and lethal sarin nerve gas) in north-western Syria. First reports place the death toll at 70 to 100, many childern. Several reported that airstrikes had targeted clinics treating the wounded. Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province is a rebel-held town of 165,000. Around 30 Turkish ambulances gathered at the border in Hatay Province for medical evacuation of victims after the Syrian toxic gas attack, to be brought to Turkey for immediate medical aid. (Credit Image: © Ferhat Dervisoglu/Depo Photos via ZUMA Wire)
    20170404_zaa_d118_011.jpg
  • April 4, 2017 - Hatay, Hatay Province, Turkey - ACIL Emergency facility and ambulances wait for  victims of a supposed nerve gas attack (possibly the powerful and lethal sarin nerve gas) in north-western Syria. First reports place the death toll at 70 to 100, many childern. Several reported that airstrikes had targeted clinics treating the wounded. Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province is a rebel-held town of 165,000. Around 30 Turkish ambulances came to the border in Hatay Province, Turkey for medical evacuation of victims after the Syrian toxic gas attack, then to be brought to Turkish medical aid. (Credit Image: © Ferhat Dervisoglu/Depo Photos via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170404_zaa_d118_005.jpg
  • April 4, 2017 - AlHabeet, Idhib Province, Syria - Children victims from a result of shelling with chemical materials of the town of AlHabeet are wrapped in a blanket. Syrian Civil Defense aka the White Helmets, helped these young victims, after morning attack of a suspected serious lethal gas (most likely sarin nerve gas), in rebel-held Idlib Province in northwestern Syria, near Turkey (population 165,000). A score wounded and over dozen already dead, others might die shortly as a after effect of exposure to deadly gases. The inhabitants are overwhelmingly Sunni Muslims, although there is a significant Christian minority. (Credit Image: © Syria Civil Defense via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170404_jlr_z03_002.jpg
  • April 4, 2017 - AlHabeet, Idhib Province, Syria - Children victims from a result of shelling with chemical materials of the town of AlHabeet are wrapped in a blanket. Syrian Civil Defense aka the White Helmets, helped these young victims, after morning attack of a suspected serious lethal gas (most likely sarin nerve gas), in rebel-held Idlib Province in northwestern Syria, near Turkey (population 165,000). A score wounded and over dozen already dead, others might die shortly as a after effect of exposure to deadly gases. The inhabitants are overwhelmingly Sunni Muslims, although there is a significant Christian minority. (Credit Image: © Syria Civil Defense via ZUMA Wire)
    20170404_jlr_z03_002.jpg
  • May 26, 2020, Fredrick, Maryland, USA: Colorized scanning electron micrograph of a dead cell heavily infected with SARS-COV-2 virus particles (yellow), isolated from a patient sample. REMDESIVIR, a drug treatment appears to shorten recovery time for people with coronavirus according to new research. UK Health Secretary Hancock said it was probably the biggest step forward in the treatment of coronavirus since the crisis began. Remdesivir is an anti-viral medicine that has been used against Ebola. Researchers there is enough evidence to approve its use in selected Covid-19 hospital patients.The US and Japan have made urgent arrangements to provide early access to the medicine before they have a marketing agreement. The drug is currently undergoing clinical trials around the world. Early data suggests it can cut recovery time by about four days, but there is no evidence yet that it will save more lives. Remdesivir is superior to the standard of care for the treatment of COVID-19, according to the research  published in The New England Journal of Medicine. The preliminary analysis is based on data from a  treatment trial.<br />
Made by the American government's National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) at NIAID IRF (National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases Integrated Research Facility) Fort Detrick. The SARS-CoV-2 which causes COVID-19 disease first discovered December 2019 in Wuhan, China. (Credit Image: © NIAID via ZUMA Wire)
    20200526_zia_z03_100.jpg
  • Mafuja Haque, 13, sits on a wheelchair as she waits for vehicle at outside of the Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, April 20, 2020. 164 Bangladeshis stranded in India due to lockdown have been brought back by a special flight of US-Bangla Airlines landed at Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport. Due to lockdown in India over COVID-19 situation, the Bangladeshis went medical and business purposes got stuck in the country. India allowed special flights when Bangladesh took the initiative to bring these citizens back. Photo by Suvra Kanti Das/ABACAPRESS.COM
    728262_029.jpg
  • Mafuja Haque, 13, sits on a wheelchair as she waits for vehicle at outside of the Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, April 20, 2020. 164 Bangladeshis stranded in India due to lockdown have been brought back by a special flight of US-Bangla Airlines landed at Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport. Due to lockdown in India over COVID-19 situation, the Bangladeshis went medical and business purposes got stuck in the country. India allowed special flights when Bangladesh took the initiative to bring these citizens back. Photo by Suvra Kanti Das/ABACAPRESS.COM
    728262_023.jpg
  • ALL HANDS ON DECK: February 2, 2020, Zouping, Binzhou Township, Shandong Province, China: Overwhelmed with emotion, nurses hug. Hands and hugs as nurses comfort each other. They are part of a eight nurse and doctors team, taking care of patients who have new coronavirus COVID-19 pneumonia, in the isolation ward in Zouping People's Republic Hostipal. (Credit Image: © Dong Naide/TPG via ZUMA Press)
    20200202_zcc_t49_005.jpg
  • March 24, 2020, New York, New York, USA: Movement at the Grand Central Terminal in Manhattan during the Coronavirus Pandemic COVID-19 in New York in the United States. (Credit Image: © Vanessa Carvalho/ZUMA Wire)
    20200324_zsp_c233_024.jpg
  • March 24, 2020, New York, New York, USA: Movement at the Grand Central Terminal in Manhattan during the Coronavirus Pandemic COVID-19 in New York in the United States. (Credit Image: © Vanessa Carvalho/ZUMA Wire)
    20200324_zsp_c233_006.jpg
  • March 23, 2020, Rome, Italy: A man walks in front of the Colosseum during the 14th day of lockdown imposed nationwide by the Italian government that tries to tackle the coronavirus outbreak. All movement in the city is restricted, and streets usually filled with life and traffic are almost empty.  (Credit Image: © Giuseppe Fama/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20200323_zaa_p133_162.jpg
  • March 22, 2020, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia: Empty road during day five of Movement Control Order (MCO) enforcement. Malaysia is under 14 days partial lockdown as the government enforce the order for people to stay home in an attempt to curb the coronavirus outbreak amid the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic. (Credit Image: © Zahim Mohd/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20200322_zaa_n230_383.jpg
  • March 17, 2020, Paris, France: The Arc de Triomphe. during confinement in France to fight against the coronavirus (Credit Image: © Adrien Vautier/Le Pictorium Agency via ZUMA Press)
    20200317_zaa_p164_026.jpg
  • March 16, 2020, USA: A man walks past aisles of empty shelves during these days of the COVID-19 pandemic, at the Target store in Alexandria, Va., Monday, March16, 2020. Credit: Rod Lamkey / CNP (Credit Image: © Rod Lamkey/CNP via ZUMA Wire)
    20200316_zaa_s152_059.jpg
  • March 5, 2020,  Milan, Italy: A hydraulics professor from Milan Polytechnic in an empty classroom teaching a lesson via webcam to comply with the new measures against the spread of coronavirus. (Credit Image: © Claudio Furlan/LaPresse via ZUMA Press)
    20200305_zaf_z19_066.jpg
  • March 10, 2020, Long Beach, California, USA: Cal Poly Mustangs forward ALICIA ROUFOSSE, left, grabs a rebound from Long Beach State forward CYDNEE KINSLOW, right, in an empty Walter Pyramid in the Big West tournament in Long Beach on Tuesday. Fears over the coronavirus have forced tournament organizers to ban fans from the games this week. (Credit Image: © Scott Varley/Orange County Register via ZUMA Wire)
    20200310_zan_o44_075.jpg
  • April 4, 2017 - Khan Sheikhoun, Syria - Medics spray down a victim lying on the ground, hurt  by what rescue workers described as a suspected gas attack (most likely sarin never gas), in rebel-held Idlib, Syria. Idlib is a city in northwestern Syria, capital of the Idlib Governorate, near Turkey and 59 kilometers south west of Aleppo. It has an elevation of nearly 500 meters above sea level, population around 165,000. The inhabitants are overwhelmingly Sunni Muslims, although there is a significant Christian minority. (Credit Image: © Edlib Media Center via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170404_zba_r01_646.jpg
  • April 4, 2017 - Hatay, Hatay Province, Turkey - A young man being rushed on a gurney, to get help after being a part of a supposed nerve gas attack (possibly the powerful and lethal sarin nerve gas) in north-western Syria. First reports place the death toll at 70 to 100, many childern. Several reported that airstrikes had targeted clinics treating the wounded. Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province is a rebel-held town of 165,000. Around 30 Turkish ambulances gathered at the border in Hatay Province for medical evacuation of victims after the Syrian toxic gas attack, to be brought to Turkey for immediate medical aid. (Credit Image: © Ferhat Dervisoglu/Depo Photos via ZUMA Wire
    RTI20170404_zaa_d118_010.jpg
  • April 4, 2017 - Hatay, Hatay Province, Turkey - A young man on a gurney, getting help after being a part of a supposed nerve gas attack (possibly the powerful and lethal sarin nerve gas) in north-western Syria. First reports place the death toll at 70 to 100, many childern. Several reported that airstrikes had targeted clinics treating the wounded. Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province is a rebel-held town of 165,000. Around 30 Turkish ambulances gathered at the border in Hatay Province for medical evacuation of victims after the Syrian toxic gas attack, to be brought to Turkey for immediate medical aid. (Credit Image: © Ferhat Dervisoglu/Depo Photos via ZUMA Wire)
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  • April 4, 2017 - Hatay, Hatay Province, Turkey - A medic helps a victim of nerve gas attack (possibly the powerful and lethal sarin nerve gas) in north-western Syria. First reports place the death toll at 70 to 100, many childern. Several reported that airstrikes had targeted clinics treating the wounded. Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province is a rebel-held town of 165,000. Around 30 Turkish ambulances came to the border in Hatay Province, Turkey for medical evacuation of victims after the Syrian toxic gas attack, then to be brought to Turkish medical aid. (Credit Image: © Ferhat Dervisoglu/Depo Photos via ZUMA Wire)
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  • April 4, 2017 - Hatay, Hatay Province, Turkey - Ambulance rushes to help victims of a deadly nerve gas attack (possibly the powerful and lethal sarin nerve gas) in north-western Syria. First reports place the death toll at 70 to 100, many childern. Several reported that airstrikes had targeted clinics treating the wounded. Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province is a rebel-held town of 165,000. Around 30 Turkish ambulances came to the border in Hatay Province, Turkey for medical evacuation of victims after the Syrian toxic gas attack, then to be brought to Turkish medical aid. (Credit Image: © Ferhat Dervisoglu/Depo Photos via ZUMA Wire)
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  • 164 Bangladeshis stranded in India due to lockdown have been brought back by a special flight of US-Bangla Airlines landed at Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, April 20, 2020. Due to lockdown in India over COVID-19 situation, the Bangladeshis went medical and business purposes got stuck in the country. India allowed special flights when Bangladesh took the initiative to bring these citizens back. Photo by Suvra Kanti Das/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • NEW YORK, NY - APRIL 19: The Coler Hospital campus on Roosevelt Island is seen amid the coronavirus (covid-19) pandemic on April 19, 2020 in New York City. Coler Hospital, which was closed 2018, is being looked at by New York City as a location for expanded hospital facilities to treat coronavirus patients. 19 Apr 2020 Pictured: NEW YORK, NY - APRIL 19: People take advantage of a warm spring day to spend time in the parks on Roosevelt Island amid the coronavirus (covid-19) pandemic on April 19, 2020 in New York City. Photo credit: Ron Adar / M10s / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
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  • April 7, 2020, Dhaka, Bangladesh: With great respect and care a team of gravediggers and health workers, dressed in full protective suits, say final words and bury the body of coronavirus victim, JALAL SAIFUR RAHMAN, the director of the Banglandish Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC). Jalal, a director of Bangladesh government’s main anti-graft body, had tested positive for COVID-19 seven days ago. Dr. Shihab Uddin, superintendent of Kuwait Bangladesh Friendship Government Hospital, one of the dedicated hospitals for treating coronavirus-infected patients in Bangladesh, said: “He was in a intensive care unit of the hospital and last late night his blood pressure fell down rapidly. We tried our level best. But today [Monday] at 7.30 a.m. he died.” Bangladesh on Monday, reported 29 new coronavirus patients and four new deaths, raising the total number of confirmed cases in the country to 123 and death toll to 13. Since appearing in Wuhan, China last December, the novel coronavirus has spread to at least 183 countries and regions, killed scores and infected millions. (Credit Image: © Sultan Mahmud Mukut/SOPA Images via ZUMA Wire)
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  • March 22, 2020, Milan, Italy: Army soldiers enforce a Coronavirus COVID-19 emergency stay-at-home decree by checking passengers at the gates to access trains at Milan Piazza Duomo to verify the actual need to move. (Credit Image: © Carlo Cozzoli/Fotogramma/ROPI via ZUMA Press)
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  • March 20, 2020, Wuhan, Hubei Province, China: Nurses hold hands to do a cheer for Wuhan at the makeshift Huoshenshan (Fire God Mountain) Hospital in Wuhan, capital of central China's Hubei Province In the severe case medical department of the makeshift Huoshenshan (Fire God Mountain) Hospital, 50 nurses, most thirty-something women, who show no fear of the coronavirus COVID-19 and whose bravery and determination is a sight to see. (Credit Image: © Yuguo Wang/Xinhua via ZUMA Wire)
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  • March 17, 2020, New York, New York, USA: The NAKED COWBOY wearing a face mask while performing in Times Square. (Credit Image: © Michael Brochstein/ZUMA Wire)
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  • March 23, 2020, Palm Beach, Florida, USA: The Breakers hotel has no guests. The hotel closed last week over concerns about the coronavirus. It plans to stay closed for at least three weeks. (Credit Image: © Greg Lovett/The Palm Beach Post via ZUMA Wire)
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  • March 20, 2020, Los Angeles, California, USA: The 10 Freeway and 110 Freeway have unusually light traffic because of the coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak during midday in Downtown Los Angeles. (Credit Image: © Jeff Gritchen/Orange County Register via ZUMA Wire)
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  • March 19, 2020, London, England, United Kingdom: General view of an empty subway platform at Chancery Lane Underground Station. Transport for London announced the closure of up to 40 stations as officials advised against non-essential travel. Bus and London Overground service will also be reduced. (Credit Image: © Alberto Pezzali/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
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  • March 18, 2020, New York, New York, USA: General view of The Oculus as the Coronavirus, COVID-19, outbreak continues. Across the city businesses, schools and places of work have been shutting down, leading to empty streets and quiet neighborhoods. (Credit Image: © Joel Marklund/Bildbyran via ZUMA Press)
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  • March 15, 2020: Warsaw, Poland: Empty streets in following the declaration of the state of epidemic threat during an outbreak of coronavirus in Poland. (Credit Image: © Kuba Stezycki/FORUM via ZUMA Press)
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  • March 18, 2020, New York, New York, USA: A person wearing a mask due to Coronavirus fears, crosses an empty Brooklyn Bridge. Coronavirus fears spread as people wear masks and subway stations and various other venues empty out. (Credit Image: © Starmax/Newscom via ZUMA Press)
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  • Story of the Week zReportage.com: Launched TUESDAY March 24, 2020 on www.zReportage.com Story #729: The BIG EMPTY: Stay-at-Home, Save the Human Race! The Brooklyn Bridge opened May 24, 1883, connecting Manhattan and Brooklyn Boroughs of Metropolitian New York City, one of the biggest cities in the world for last two centuries. 6,000+ pedestrians and 3,000+ cyclists cross it on a average day. As the Stay-at-Home edicts have come down to protect spread of coronavirus COVID-19, this lone woman has it mostly to herself. Wearing a medical mask for protection and a red wool cap to stay warm, on a brisk spring day and a hoodie with NEW YORK largely emblazon on it, sporting a symbolic yellow cautionary background. Tourist hotspots and high population destiny workspaces public spaces around the world are deserted due to COVID-19, with several major cities under total lockdown. In cities not under lockdown, social distancing measures are being heavily encouraged. ZUMA Press sent its photojournalists out to span the globe and Tell This Story That Needed to be Told: THE NEW NORMAL: A Story of Daily Life in Pandemic Times. ZUMA Press photographers contributing to this global coverage reportage series, are among others: Adrien Vautier, Alberto Pezzali, Andy Barton, Anton Novoderezhkin, Aristides Vafeiadaki, Armin Weigel, Bernd Thissen, Claudio Furlan, David Crane, David Powell, Dirk Shadd, Dirk Waem, Gene Blevins, Giuseppe Fama, Greg Lovett, Jeff Gritchen, Joel Marklund, John Nacion, Kuba Stezycki, Laporta Salvatore, Lev Radin, Marechal Aurore, Markus Scholz, Mirco Toniolo, Naoki Nishimura, Paul Kuroda, Petit Francis, Rod Lamkey, Scott Varley, Valery Sharifulin, Vanessa Carvalho, Zahim Mohd. (Credit THIS Image: © John Nacion Starmax/Newscom via ZUMA Press)
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  • March 18,2020, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA: OYO hotel lobby empty as it closed down at 12am Wednesday morning for up to 30+ days due to COVID-19. (Credit Image: © Gene Blevins/ZUMA Wire)
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  • March 13, 2020, St. Petersburg, Florida, USA: The sun rises over the track with what will remain empty stands as USF2000 cars zoom towards turn 10 in the first practice session of the weekend at the Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg. (Credit Image: © Dirk Shadd/Tampa Bay Times via ZUMA Wire)
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  • March 11, 2020, Athens, Greece: Parthenon monument empty from tourists. Greek tourism hit hard by cancellations amid coronavirus outbreak. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
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  • April 4, 2017 - Khan Sheikhoun, Syria - A victim lying on the ground, wounded and some dead, hurt and killed by what rescue workers described as a suspected gas attack (most likely sarin never gas), in rebel-held Idlib, Syria. Idlib is a city in northwestern Syria, capital of the Idlib Governorate, near Turkey and 59 kilometers south west of Aleppo. It has an elevation of nearly 500 meters above sea level, population around 165,000. The inhabitants are overwhelmingly Sunni Muslims, although there is a significant Christian minority. (Credit Image: © Edlib Media Center via ZUMA Wire)
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  • April 4, 2017 - Hatay, Hatay Province, Turkey - A young boy being rushed on a gurney, to get help after being a part of a supposed nerve gas attack (possibly the powerful and lethal sarin nerve gas) in north-western Syria. First reports place the death toll at 70 to 100, many childern. Several reported that airstrikes had targeted clinics treating the wounded. Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province is a rebel-held town of 165,000. Around 30 Turkish ambulances gathered at the border in Hatay Province for medical evacuation of victims after the Syrian toxic gas attack, to be brought to Turkey for immediate medical aid. (Credit Image: © Ferhat Dervisoglu/Depo Photos via ZUMA Wire)
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  • April 4, 2017 - Khan Sheikhoun, Syria - A young boy lying on the ground, hurt by what rescue workers described as a suspected gas attack (most likely sarin never gas), in rebel-held Idlib, Syria. Idlib is a city in northwestern Syria, capital of the Idlib Governorate, near Turkey and 59 kilometers south west of Aleppo. It has an elevation of nearly 500 meters above sea level, population around 165,000. The inhabitants are overwhelmingly Sunni Muslims, although there is a significant Christian minority. (Credit Image: © Edlib Media Center via ZUMA Wire)
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  • April 4, 2017 - Hatay, Hatay Province, Turkey - A baby getting help after being a part of a supposed nerve gas attack (possibly the powerful and lethal sarin nerve gas) in north-western Syria. First reports place the death toll at 70 to 100, many childern. Several reported that airstrikes had targeted clinics treating the wounded. Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province is a rebel-held town of 165,000. Around 30 Turkish ambulances gathered at the border in Hatay Province for medical evacuation of victims after the Syrian toxic gas attack, to be brought to Turkey for immediate medical aid. (Credit Image: © Ferhat Dervisoglu/Depo Photos via ZUMA Wire)
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  • April 4, 2017 - Hatay, Hatay Province, Turkey - Ambulances gather to help victims of a nerve gas attack (possibly the powerful and lethal sarin nerve gas) in north-western Syria. First reports place the death toll at 70 to 100, many childern. Several reported that airstrikes had targeted clinics treating the wounded. Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province is a rebel-held town of 165,000. Around 30 Turkish ambulances came to the border in Hatay Province, Turkey for medical evacuation of victims after the Syrian toxic gas attack, then to be brought to Turkish medical aid. (Credit Image: © Ferhat Dervisoglu/Depo Photos via ZUMA Wire)
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  • April 4, 2017 - Hatay, Hatay Province, Turkey - A young man getting help in a ambulance, after being a part of a supposed nerve gas attack (possibly the powerful and lethal sarin nerve gas) in north-western Syria. First reports place the death toll at 70 to 100, many childern. Several reported that airstrikes had targeted clinics treating the wounded. Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province is a rebel-held town of 165,000. Around 30 Turkish ambulances gathered at the border in Hatay Province for medical evacuation of victims after the Syrian toxic gas attack, to be brought to Turkey for immediate medical aid. (Credit Image: © Ferhat Dervisoglu/Depo Photos via ZUMA Wire)
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  • April 4, 2017 - Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province, Syria - Syrian Civil Defense aka the White Helmets, helping young child victim, after morning attack of a suspected serious lethal gas (most likely sarin nerve gas), in rebel-held Idlib Province in northwestern Syria, near Turkey (population 165,000). A score wounded and over dozen already dead, others might die shortly as a after effect of exposure to deadly gases. The inhabitants are overwhelmingly Sunni Muslims, although there is a significant Christian minority. (Credit Image: © Syria Civil Defense via ZUMA Wire)
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  • April 4, 2017 - Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province, Syria - Syrian Civil Defense aka the White Helmets, helping a victim, after morning attack of a suspected serious lethal gas (most likely sarin nerve gas), in rebel-held Idlib Province in northwestern Syria, near Turkey (population 165,000). A score wounded and over dozen already dead, others might die shortly as a after effect of exposure to deadly gases. The inhabitants are overwhelmingly Sunni Muslims, although there is a significant Christian minority. (Credit Image: © Syria Civil Defense via ZUMA Wire)
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  • April 4, 2017 - Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province, Syria - Syrian Civil Defense aka the White Helmets, helping victims after morning attack of a suspected serious lethal gas (most likely sarin nerve gas), in rebel-held Idlib Province in northwestern Syria, near Turkey (population 165,000). A score wounded and over dozen already dead, others might die shortly as a after effect of exposure to deadly gases. The inhabitants are overwhelmingly Sunni Muslims, although there is a significant Christian minority. (Credit Image: © Syria Civil Defense via ZUMA Wire).
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  • April 4, 2017 - Hatay, Hatay Province, Turkey - A baby getting help after being a part of a supposed nerve gas attack (possibly the powerful and lethal sarin nerve gas) in north-western Syria. First reports place the death toll at 70 to 100, many childern. Several reported that airstrikes had targeted clinics treating the wounded. Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province is a rebel-held town of 165,000. Around 30 Turkish ambulances gathered at the border in Hatay Province for medical evacuation of victims after the Syrian toxic gas attack, to be brought to Turkey for immediate medical aid. (Credit Image: © Ferhat Dervisoglu/Depo Photos via ZUMA Wire)
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  • April 4, 2017 - Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province, Syria - Syrian Civil Defense aka the White Helmets, helping victims after morning attack of a suspected serious lethal gas (most likely sarin nerve gas), in rebel-held Idlib Province in northwestern Syria, near Turkey (population 165,000). A score wounded and over dozen already dead, others might die shortly as a after effect of exposure to deadly gases. The inhabitants are overwhelmingly Sunni Muslims, although there is a significant Christian minority. (Credit Image: © Syria Civil Defence via ZUMA Wire).
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  • March 18, 2020, Fredrick, Maryland, USA: A scanning transmission electron micrograph of COVID-19, novel coronavirus, an apoptotic cell heavily infected with SARS-COV-2 virus particles, isolated from a patient sample. Vivid illustration is a color enhanced stunning microscopic image of the coronavirus responsible for the worldwide Pandemic outbreak. Made by the American government's National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) at NIAID IRF (National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases Integrated Research Facility) Fort Detrick. The SARS-CoV-2 which causes COVID-19 disease first discovered December 2019 in Wuhan, China. (Credit Image: © NIAID via ZUMA Wire)
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  • March 18, 2020, Ponte San Pietro (Bergamo) Italy: The mortuary (morgue) of Ponte San Pietro Hospital in the Province of Bergamo the area where the highest number of infection of COVID19 Coronavirus was recorded. (Credit Image: © Carlo Cozzoli/Fotogramma/ROPI via ZUMA Press)
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  • March 19, 2020, San Francisco, California, USA: With stores like Nordstrom, and GAP at left, closed, and people staying home for the Shelter in Place order due to coronavirus. Market St. seen from above, had far fewer pedestrians than usual, in San Francisco. (Credit Image: © Paul Kuroda/ZUMA Wire)
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  • March 19, 2020, Hollywood, California, USA: With no tourists or crowds to perform for along Hollywood Blvd, JONTE FLORENCE works on his moves near Hollywood and Highland Thursday. The coronavirus has closed restaurants, stores, theaters and many commuters are now working from home. (Credit Image: © David Crane/Orange County Register via ZUMA Wire)
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  • April 4, 2017 - Hatay, Hatay Province, Turkey - Men in masks and hazmat suits push a boy to the hospital on a gurney. The young victim, was a part of a supposed nerve gas attack (possibly the powerful and lethal sarin nerve gas) in north-western Syria. Death toll at 70 and rising, many childern. The airstrikes appear to have targeted clinics treating the wounded in Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province it is a rebel-held town of 165,000. Around 30 Turkish ambulances gathered at the border in Hatay Province for medical evacuation of victims after the Syrian toxic gas attack, to be brought to Turkey for immediate medical aid. (Credit Image: © Ferhat Dervisoglu/Depo Photos via ZUMA Wire)
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  • April 4, 2017 - Hatay, Hatay Province, Turkey - A young boy being rushed on a gurney, to get help after being a part of a supposed nerve gas attack (possibly the powerful and lethal sarin nerve gas) in north-western Syria. First reports place the death toll at 70 to 100, many childern. Several reported that airstrikes had targeted clinics treating the wounded. Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province is a rebel-held town of 165,000. Around 30 Turkish ambulances gathered at the border in Hatay Province for medical evacuation of victims after the Syrian toxic gas attack, to be brought to Turkey for immediate medical aid. (Credit Image: © Ferhat Dervisoglu/Depo Photos via ZUMA Wire)
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  • June 8, 2017 - Inconnu, inconnu - 07/06/2017 - A patch could help improve sleep and even save lives by detecting a sleep disorder that usually requires hospital Sleep apnea is a serious condition that happens when a person’s breathing in interrupted during sleep.Left untreated it sufferers stop breathing repeatedly , sometimes hundreds of times a night.This means the brain and the rest of the body may not get enough oxygen.It can lead to high blood pressure, a stroke, heart attack, diabetes depression and headaches.People who are suspected of having the condition are often sent for a sleep study known as polysomnography.This involves their spending the night sleeping at a clinic, with numerous electrodes hard-wired to their head. The new SomnaPatch is simple and – according to the recently-released results of a study – almost as accurate.Made by California-based Somnarus, the SomnaPatch weighs less than 28 grams / one ounce.It consists of a forehead-worn disposable adhesive patch connected to a nosepiece. It is worn while the patient sleeps in their own bed, and uses integrated sensors to measure and record factors such as nasal pressure, blood oxygen saturation, heart rate, respiratory effort, sleep duration and changes in body position.As part of its efforts to obtain US Food and Drug Administration approval, Somnarus conducted a study of the device at three US sleep clinics last year. This involved having 174 test subjects undergo standard polysomnography while also using the SomnaPatch.When the readings obtained by the two approaches were compared, they were found to be in agreement 87.4 percent of the time.Additionally, a separate home usability study found that 38 out of 39 users were able to use the device to record at least four hours of sleep, guided by nothing but the included instructions.A spokesman said:’ SomnaPatch records respiratory patterns, pulse oximetry data and estimates sleep time based on proprietary algorithms and
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  • June 27, 2017 - Fogueiras e fogos podem causar problemas respiratórios mesmo em curto período de tempo, inalar fumaça pode causar efeitos imediatos. Na foto, criança faz inalação. (Credit Image: © Marcelo Cortes/Fotoarena via ZUMA Press)
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  • February 7, 2020, Wuhan, China: FILE: Dr. LI WENDING, 33, the Chinese whistleblower doctor who warned the public of a potential 'SARS-like' disease in December 2019, has died of the coronavirus in Wuhan today. Li Wenliang was a Chinese ophthalmologist who worked as a physician at Wuhan Central Hospital. Li warned his colleagues in December 2019 about a possible outbreak of an illness that resembled severe acute respiratory syndrome, later acknowledged as COVID-19. Born: October 12, 1986, Beizhen, Jinzhou, China. Died: February 7, 2020, Central Hospital of Wuhan. PICTURED: January 6, 2020. Chinese doctor LI WENLIANG in Wuhan Hostipal incubated. (Credit Image: © Dr. Li Wenliang via ZUMA Wire)
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  • March 18, 2020, Gaza City, Gaza Strip, Palestinian Territory: Employees from the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) for Refugees wearing a protective facemasks receive respiratory patients at some UNRWA schools, in gaza city, on March 18, 2020. As preperations are underway to receive, examine and isolate potential victims of the Covid-19 coronavirus  (Credit Image: © Ashraf Amra/APA Images via ZUMA Wire)
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  • June 3, 2016 - File - MUHAMMAD ALI, the three time heavyweight boxing champion, has died at the age of 74. He had been fighting a respiratory illness. Pictured:  Dec 26, 2004; Los Angeles, CA, USA; Former champion boxer MUHAMMAD ALI signs autographs for his supporters at a shopping Mall on Dec. 26, 2004 in Los Angeles, California. (Credit Image: Ringo Chiu/ZUMAPRESS.com)
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  • June 3, 2016 - File - Muhammad Ali, the three time heavyweight boxing champion, has died at the age of 74. He had been fighting a respiratory illness. Pictured: Aug 02, 2004; Los Angeles, CA, USA; Former Boxer MUHAMMAD ALI at the 'Collateral' Los Angeles Premiere held at the Orpheum Theatre. (Credit Image: Rena Durham/ZUMAPRESS.com)
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  • June 3, 2016 - File - MUHAMMAD ALI, the three time heavyweight boxing champion, has died at the age of 74. He had been fighting a respiratory illness. 'The Greatest' was the dominant heavyweight boxer of the 1960s and 1970s, Ali won an Olympic gold medal in Rome in 1960, captured the professional world heavyweight championship on three separate occasions, and successfully defended his title 19 times. PICTURED: November 11, 1977 - At a dinner, honoring the six 'Outstanding Chicagoans of Today,' Boxing champ MUHAMMAD ALI takes a playful poke at sportscaster HOWARD COSELL. Advising them to break clean in the clinches is columnist Ann Landers.  (Credit Image: © Chicago Tribune/TNS/ZUMAPRESS.com)
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  • June 3, 2016 - File - MUHAMMAD ALI, the three time heavyweight boxing champion, has died at the age of 74. He had been fighting a respiratory illness. 'The Greatest' was the dominant heavyweight boxer of the 1960s and 1970s, Ali won an Olympic gold medal in Rome in 1960, captured the professional world heavyweight championship on three separate occasions, and successfully defended his title 19 times. PICTURED: September 20, 1994 - Michigan, Michigan, U.S. - Hulk-o-Ali headlock. Hyping the upcoming Halloween Havoc sunday october 23, at the joe louis arena, MUHAMMAD ALI, will present the championship belt. here, with HULK HOGAN backstage before the infamous press conference announcing the match between nature boy ric flair, and hulk hogan in a steel cage match where just about anything can happen and probably will. (Credit Image: © Steven R. Nickerson/Detroit Free Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • June 3, 2016 - File - MUHAMMAD ALI, the three time heavyweight boxing champion, has died at the age of 74. He had been fighting a respiratory illness. 'The Greatest' was the dominant heavyweight boxer of the 1960s and 1970s, Ali won an Olympic gold medal in Rome in 1960, captured the professional world heavyweight championship on three separate occasions, and successfully defended his title 19 times. PICTURED: October 18, 1979 - Michigan, U.S. - MUHAMMAD ALI greets ROSA PARKS in 1979. (Credit Image: © Ira Rosenberg/Detroit Free Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • June 3, 2016 - File - MUHAMMAD ALI, the three time heavyweight boxing champion, has died at the age of 74. He had been fighting a respiratory illness. 'The Greatest' was the dominant heavyweight boxer of the 1960s and 1970s, Ali won an Olympic gold medal in Rome in 1960, captured the professional world heavyweight championship on three separate occasions, and successfully defended his title 19 times. PICTURED: July 9, 1966 - Florida, U.S. - A tender moment with the Champ. MUHAMMAD ALI hugs a 4-year-old admirer. (Credit Image: © The Palm Beach Post via ZUMA Wire)
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  • June 3, 2016 - File - MUHAMMAD ALI, the three time heavyweight boxing champion, has died at the age of 74. He had been fighting a respiratory illness. 'The Greatest' was the dominant heavyweight boxer of the 1960s and 1970s, Ali won an Olympic gold medal in Rome in 1960, captured the professional world heavyweight championship on three separate occasions, and successfully defended his title 19 times. PICTURED: Oct. 12, 1964 - Florida, U.S. - October 12, 1964: MUHAMMAD ALI  shows off his mighty fist and his championship belt. (Credit Image: © The Palm Beach Post via ZUMA Wire)
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  • June 3, 2016 - File - MUHAMMAD ALI, the three time heavyweight boxing champion, has died at the age of 74. He had been fighting a respiratory illness. 'The Greatest' was the dominant heavyweight boxer of the 1960s and 1970s, Ali won an Olympic gold medal in Rome in 1960, captured the professional world heavyweight championship on three separate occasions, and successfully defended his title 19 times. PICTURED: May 27, 1963 - London, England, United Kingdom - A supremely confident CASSIUS CLAY holds up five fingers in a prediction of how many rounds it will take him to knock out British boxer Henry Cooper.  (Credit Image: © Randle/Mirrorpix/NC via ZUMA Press)
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  • January 31, 2020, Atlanta, Georgia, USA: COVID-19 (SARS-CoV-2 ) Illustration revealing ultrastructural morphology exhibited by the 2019 Novel Coronavirus (2019-nCoV). Note the spikes that adorn the outer surface of the virus, which impart the look of a corona surrounding the virion, when viewed electron microscopically. This virus was identified as the cause of an outbreak of respiratory illness first detected in Wuhan, China in December of 2019. The illustration was created at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and released to public month, after first official case reported in Wuhan, China. ***Editorial USAGE Only*** (Credit Image: ©  CDC via ZUMA Wire)
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  • June 3, 2016 - File - MUHAMMAD ALI, the three time heavyweight boxing champion, has died at the age of 74. He had been fighting a respiratory illness. 'The Greatest' was the dominant heavyweight boxer of the 1960s and 1970s, Ali won an Olympic gold medal in Rome in 1960, captured the professional world heavyweight championship on three separate occasions, and successfully defended his title 19 times. PICTURED: Nov. 5, 2011 - New York, NY, USA - In this 1971 file photo, JOE FRAZIER dazed MUHAMMAD ALI during their heavyweight championship in New York City.  (Credit Image: © Philadelphia Inquirer/TNS/ZUMAPRESS.com)
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  • June 3, 2016 - File - MUHAMMAD ALI, the three time heavyweight boxing champion, has died at the age of 74. He had been fighting a respiratory illness. Pictured: Jan 01, 1980 - Los Angeles, California, USA - Boxing Legend MUHAMMAD ALI (born CASSIUS CLAY JR.) pictured in front of his Los Angeles home. (Credit Image: © Bernard Fallon/ZUMA Press)
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  • June 3, 2016 - File - MUHAMMAD ALI, the three time heavyweight boxing champion, has died at the age of 74. He had been fighting a respiratory illness. 'The Greatest' was the dominant heavyweight boxer of the 1960s and 1970s, Ali won an Olympic gold medal in Rome in 1960, captured the professional world heavyweight championship on three separate occasions, and successfully defended his title 19 times. PICTURED: November 2, 1977 - Michigan, U.S. - MUHAMMAD ALI, right, squared off with some local greats like DETROIT LARRY (left). World heavy weight boxing champion Muhammad Ali was in Detroit Tuesday and thousands of fans turned out to show him that they think he's the best, the champ, the greatest. (Credit Image: © Bob Scott/Detroit Free Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • June 3, 2016 - File - MUHAMMAD ALI, the three time heavyweight boxing champion, has died at the age of 74. He had been fighting a respiratory illness. 'The Greatest' was the dominant heavyweight boxer of the 1960s and 1970s, Ali won an Olympic gold medal in Rome in 1960, captured the professional world heavyweight championship on three separate occasions, and successfully defended his title 19 times. PICTURED: Oct. 28, 1964 - Florida, U.S. - October 28, 1964: MUHAMMAD ALI shows off his title belt. (Credit Image: © The Palm Beach Post via ZUMA Wire)
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  • June 3, 2016 - File - MUHAMMAD ALI, the three time heavyweight boxing champion, has died at the age of 74. He had been fighting a respiratory illness. 'The Greatest' was the dominant heavyweight boxer of the 1960s and 1970s, Ali won an Olympic gold medal in Rome in 1960, captured the professional world heavyweight championship on three separate occasions, and successfully defended his title 19 times. PICTURED: Jan. 24, 1964 - Florida, U.S. - January 24, 1964: MUHAMMAD ALI gets a checkup. Ali could turn any situation into an interesting photograph. (Credit Image: © The Palm Beach Post via ZUMA Wire)
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  • June 3, 2016 - File - MUHAMMAD ALI, the three time heavyweight boxing champion, has died at the age of 74. He had been fighting a respiratory illness. 'The Greatest' was the dominant heavyweight boxer of the 1960s and 1970s, Ali won an Olympic gold medal in Rome in 1960, captured the professional world heavyweight championship on three separate occasions, and successfully defended his title 19 times.<br />
June 26, 1976 - Tokyo, Japan - MUHAMMAD ALI (born: Cassius Marcellus Clay Jr.), 34, vs. ANTONIO INOKI. The fight between American boxer Ali and Japanese professional wrestler Inoki was held at the Nippon Budokan arena in Tokyo. At the time, Ali had come off a knockout victory over R. Dunn in May and was the reigning WBC/WBA Heavyweight Champion. Inoki, who had been taught the art of catch wrestling by legendary wrestler K. Gotch, was staging exhibition fights against champions of various martial arts, in an attempt to show that pro wrestling was the dominant fighting discipline. The fight itself, which was fought under special rules, is seen as a precursor to modern mixed martial arts The result of the fight has been long debated by the press and fans. The fight was refereed by G. LeBell. (Credit Image: © Keystone Press Agency/Keystone USA via ZUMAPRESS.com)
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  • October 2, 2018 - Riviera Beach, Florida, U.S. - DAVID BEYGA, visiting from the UK, slips under the caution tape after taking a look at the beach on Singer Island. Beaches were shut down in Palm Beach County following complaints of respiratory, skin and eye irritations. (Credit Image: © Allen Eyestone/The Palm Beach Post via ZUMA Wire)
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  • June 3, 2016 - File - MUHAMMAD ALI, the three time heavyweight boxing champion, has died at the age of 74. He had been fighting a respiratory illness. 'The Greatest' was the dominant heavyweight boxer of the 1960s and 1970s, Ali won an Olympic gold medal in Rome in 1960, captured the professional world heavyweight championship on three separate occasions, and successfully defended his title 19 times. PICTURED: 1988 - Mexico - Muhammad Ali  with promotor Don King and Mike Tyson. (Credit Image: © El Universal via ZUMA Wire)
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  • June 3, 2016 - File - MUHAMMAD ALI, the three time heavyweight boxing champion, has died at the age of 74. He had been fighting a respiratory illness. 'The Greatest' was the dominant heavyweight boxer of the 1960s and 1970s, Ali won an Olympic gold medal in Rome in 1960, captured the professional world heavyweight championship on three separate occasions, and successfully defended his title 19 times. PICTURED: Aug 02, 2004 - Los Angeles - Former Boxer Muhammad Ali at the 'Collateral' Los Angeles Premiere held at the Orpheum Theatre. (Credit Image: Rena Durham/ZUMAPRESS.com)
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  • June 3, 2016 - File - MUHAMMAD ALI, the three time heavyweight boxing champion, has died at the age of 74. He had been fighting a respiratory illness. Pictured: Feb. 10, 2002 - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S. - Joe Frazier was pleasantly surprised to find Muhammad Ali seated next to him during the NBA All-Star game. (Credit Image: © George Reynolds/Philadelphia Daily News/TNS/ZUMAPRESS.com)
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  • June 3, 2016 - File - MUHAMMAD ALI, the three time heavyweight boxing champion, has died at the age of 74. He had been fighting a respiratory illness. 'The Greatest' was the dominant heavyweight boxer of the 1960s and 1970s, Ali won an Olympic gold medal in Rome in 1960, captured the professional world heavyweight championship on three separate occasions, and successfully defended his title 19 times. PICTURED: Mar 01, 1998 - Miami, Florida, U.S. - US boxer MUHAMMAD ALI (born Cassius Marcus Clay on January 17, 1942 in Louisville, Kentucky) won his first heavyweight title in 1964. After being stripped of his title for refusing to join the armed forces, his title was regained after defeating former champion J. Frazier and then-champion G. Foreman in 1974. Title was regained after a loss to L. Sprinks in 1978. (Credit Image: © David Jacobs/ZUMAPRESS.com)
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  • June 3, 2016 - File - MUHAMMAD ALI, the three time heavyweight boxing champion, has died at the age of 74. He had been fighting a respiratory illness. 'The Greatest' was the dominant heavyweight boxer of the 1960s and 1970s, Ali won an Olympic gold medal in Rome in 1960, captured the professional world heavyweight championship on three separate occasions, and successfully defended his title 19 times. PICTURED: Mar 01, 1998 - Miami, FL, U.S. - US boxer MUHAMMAD ALI (born Cassius Marcus Clay on January 17, 1942 in Louisville, Kentucky) won his first heavyweight title in 1964.  After being stripped of his title for refusing to join the armed forces, his title was regained after defeating former champion J. Frazier and then-champion G. Foreman in 1974. Title was regained after a loss to Leon Sprinks in 1978. (Credit Image: © David Jacobs/ZUMA Press)
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