Computer Science, asked by rules1000, 3 months ago

7. "Not only COVID but other diseases
can also kill you." The following data
shows the deaths (in millions) of people
in the year 2017 because of some
major diseases. Write an analytical
paragraph analyzing and describing the
(5)
given data.​

Answers

Answered by Ahirjiya
2

Answer:

yes disease like phemonia,hearth disease,etc

thanks for this

Answered by praseethanerthethil
1

Answer:

It’s true that over a 24 hour period spanning 10-11 February, the World Health Organisation (WHO) reported that 108 people had died in China of Covid-19 after contracting SARS-CoV-2 (the new coronavirus that causes Covid-19). This was at the time the highest death rate for a single day.

It’s true that over a 24 hour period spanning 10-11 February, the World Health Organisation (WHO) reported that 108 people had died in China of Covid-19 after contracting SARS-CoV-2 (the new coronavirus that causes Covid-19). This was at the time the highest death rate for a single day. Since then, there have been days with a higher number of recorded deaths. According to the WHO, from 23-24 February there were 156 deaths globally (150 of which were in China).

It’s true that over a 24 hour period spanning 10-11 February, the World Health Organisation (WHO) reported that 108 people had died in China of Covid-19 after contracting SARS-CoV-2 (the new coronavirus that causes Covid-19). This was at the time the highest death rate for a single day. Since then, there have been days with a higher number of recorded deaths. According to the WHO, from 23-24 February there were 156 deaths globally (150 of which were in China).Looking at the figures for all the other causes of death mentioned in the post, some are broadly right while others are incorrect. The general claim implied by the post, that all the things listed kill more people per day than Covid-19 has so far is also correct.

The NHP data on communicable diseases with a high fatality rate, however, has an important omission - tuberculosis (TB). Official statistics suggest there were 1.7 million cases of TB in 2017, and it killed 56,277 people, numbers regarded by experts to be gross underestimates. These numbers suggest that TB had a case fatality rate of 3.2% in 2017, meaning it was comparably fatal to covid-19. Where it differs is in the number of cases (multiple times more than covid-19 cases detected so far in the country) and in its treatment (TB has a known cure and treatment regimen unlike covid-19).

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