Science, asked by Harahit777, 2 months ago

Write an report writing on covid-19.​

Answers

Answered by Laraleorapathi
5

Explanation:

The emergence of COVID-19, known in full as coronavirus disease 2019, attracted a lot of research activity across continents. By the fourth month of the pandemic, the World Health Organization (WHO) had added more than 3,000 journal publications to its COVID-19 database. These include research papers and other scientific publications, such as case studies, narrative reviews and opinions. Various scientists are studying diverse topics such as the origin of the disease, the nature of the virus, how it spreads, who and how it kills, diagnostic tests, drug and vaccine research and the link between COVID-19 and other diseases.

From a media perspective, the multiplicity of research studies on COVID-19 offer an opportunity to report science stories around the pandemic. Whereas there are still more questions than answers about the pandemic, scientists are continually generating knowledge through research.

Answered by ItzRomanticBabe
63

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The COVID-19 pandemic has caused staggering loss of life and, over the course of just a few weeks, triggered an unprecedented global shutdown. The scale of the disaster and the astonishing pace of its advance have underscored the urgent need for accurate, informative reporting about the new coronavirus. It has also tested the endurance of the journalists who are reporting the unfolding catastrophe, whether they are veteran health and science reporters or relative newcomers. “Nothing that has come before in the infectious-diseases beat is remotely as huge as this story,” says Helen Branswell, longtime infectious-diseases reporter at STAT. For many reporters, the coronavirus beat has become nearly a 24/7 job.

To document some of the challenges that reporting on COVID-19 has raised, The Open Notebook invited five journalists who are reporting from the front lines in various capacities to spend about a week reflecting on their experiences, including how they’re finding sources and keeping up on the daily torrent of new developments; the skills they’ve found most essential for pandemic reporting; and their efforts to take care of their own health and understand their role in the developing crisis. “I think about my very, very small part in all of this, and about trying to do the best work I can,” says Mark Johnson, health and science reporter at the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. “If I do my work well, I hope people will know more and be less afraid.”

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