Social Sciences, asked by mituodisi, 1 day ago

Reena lost her parents due to corona. now she has no one to take care of her . if chance is given to u how will u help her​

Answers

Answered by GlimmeryEyes
4

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We will help her by providing money. So that she will get proper education and the most important thing is health.

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Answered by Zahrah2008
0

Answer:

I would help her in anyways that is required.

Explanation:

First, we should emphasize that while older people are at highest risk from Covid-19, all of us, at all ages, need to act in solidarity to prevent the further community spread of the virus

Some of the reasons older people are greatly impacted by COVID-19 include the physiological changes associated with ageing, decreased immune function and multimorbidity which expose older adults to be more susceptible to the infection itself and make them more likely to suffer severely from COVID-19 disease and more serious complications.

But age is not the only risk for severe disease. The very notion that “COVID-19 only affects older people” is factually wrong. As a colleague of mine recently said, “Young people are not invincible”. 10% to 15% of people under 50 have moderate to severe infection. Severe cases of the disease have been seen in people in their teens or twenties, with many requiring intensive care and some unfortunately passing away.

On a positive note, there are reports of people over the age of 100 who were admitted to hospital for COVID-19 and have now since made a complete recovery. It is becoming clearer that the healthier you were before the pandemic plays a crucial role. People who age healthily are less at risk.

For those in self-quarantine or working from a home office, it is important to maintain healthy lifestyle with good nutrition, physical activity and staying away from tobacco and alcohol.

The focus to contain the pandemic may result in the disruption of routine health services, interruption of the medicine supply, confining of patients and deleting social and public services which impact people suffering from chronic conditions of heart and lung, diabetes or with immune systems that are weak including from cancer treatment.

That is why I am urging governments and health authorities to mitigate the effects of service disruption that may harm people with underlying chronic disease, increasing morbidity, disability. Policies for healthy ageing have to stay high on our policy agenda.

The figures make a clear case - protecting yourself and those in your family and community from getting infected is relevant for every single age group. It is not only an act of solidarity with others, in particular with those most likely to be severely affected, but also vital for your own health and safe

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