Write a letter to the editor of a newspaper about the miserable condition of the hospitals you usually see around.
please gusy urgently give me answer.
please help me please it's my humble request
Answers
Respected Sir,
Kindly spare me a little room in your much circulated paper to air a serious grievance of the people of our locality.
The hospital in our locality is the only health unit run and looked after by the Government. Of late the service there have deteriorated greatly. The attending physician are very often absent from their duties. Patients coming from distant places have to lie uncared for on the ground in the outdoor or the emergency department. Nurses and sweepers take little care of ghe indoor patients as well . The whole sick room is full of foul smell and dirt. The meals supplied to the patients are almost inedible -covered with flies and ants.
It is high time that Government should take some effective measures in the interest of the poor patients and restoration of public health system.
Your Faithfully,
Sushant Roy
15 das road
Pune
October 10, 2019
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Labels: Editorial Letter Editorial Letter - "The Miserable Condition of the Hospital " Letter to the Newspaper Editor Letter writing
kindly change the names you wish
and mark me as branliest
Answer:
Data from a variety of sources indicate that approximately 90 percent of all natural disasters worldwide occur in developing countries (Long, 1978). Recent Latin American and Caribbean examples illustrate the magnitude of the problem. When Hurricanes David and Frederick struck the Dominican Republic in 1979, they caused an estimated US$342 million in damage to the agricultural sector (UNDRO, 1980), destroying 80 percent of all crops and 100 percent of the banana crop. As a result, agricultural production fell 26 percent in 1979 and continued to be down 16 percent in 1980. Agriculture accounts for 37 percent of the country's gross domestic product and employs 40 percent of the labor force (USAID/OFDA, 1982). In 1984, the worst floods in Colombia in a decade caused an estimated US$400 million in damage to crops and livestock, while floods in Ecuador in 1982 and 1983 shrank the value of the banana crop by US$4.3 million (UN/ECLA, 1983).
In short, from 1960 to 1989 natural disasters caused over US$54 billion in physical damage in Latin America and the Caribbean. While the information available on the amount of national and international funds committed to reconstruction in response to each disaster is limited, the need to redirect funds to post-disaster work curtailed the availability of funds otherwise targeted for new investment.