Wednesday 23 May 2018

Deadly virus without a cure has emerged in India and it has killed a lot of people


A newly emerging deadly virus known as the Nipah virus has killed at least nine people in southern India.
Scientists found that the rare and extremely deadly Nipah virus could jump from bats to other species, including humans. The disease is currently incurable and can be transmitted from person to person. It has killed between 40 percent and 75 percent of infected people in most outbreaks.
These statistics indicate that Nipah has the potential to cause a deadly pandemic, which is why the World Health Organisation lists Nipah as an urgent research priority, alongside diseases like Ebola and SARS.
Meanwhile, a nurse is being hailed as a hero for helping to battle the Nipah virus and dying in the process. Lini Puthussery, a 28-year-old nurse, wrote a heartbreaking note to her husband as she was dying from the deadly Nipah virus on Monday in India's southern state of Kerala.
The note reads in part: "I don't think I will be able to see you again. Sorry. Please raise our children well."
Lini Puthussery has two sons, aged five and two.
At least nine other people have died in the outbreak in Kozhikode, formerly Calicut in Kerala. Of the nine people who have died so far, three cases of Nipah have been confirmed. Results from the other six are still being tested. Two others who have tested positive for the virus are critically ill. Some 40 people have been put into quarantine following the deaths.
Health authorities across Kerala have been on alert, setting up medical camps and a control room to tackle the situation.
According to Science Alert, Nipah first appeared in Malaysia in 1998, when 265 people became infected with a strange illness that caused encephalitis, or brain inflammation, after they came into contact with pigs or sick people. In that outbreak, 105 people died, a fatality rate of 40 percent. Since then, there have been a number of smaller outbreaks in India and Bangladesh, with about 280 infections and 211 deaths – an average fatality rate of 75 percent.
When the first infections jumped from pigs to humans, authorities killed more than a million pigs to try to stop the spread of the disease. Since then, however, researchers have identified several fruit bat species as the natural hosts of the virus. In some cases, humans have been infected after drinking sap from date palms that bats may have contaminated.

The BBC reported that in the most recent outbreak, mangoes bitten by bats were found in a home where three of the deceased patients lived. 
Symptoms for Nipah have varied depending on the outbreak. Many patients first experienced fever and headache, followed by drowsiness and confusion. Some patients have also shown respiratory flu-like symptoms while infected. In other cases, symptoms progressed to a coma within a day or two. 
People who survive the initial infection can have lasting health issues, including personality changes and persistent convulsions. In some cases, the virus has re-activated in patients months or years after exposure, causing illness and death

Linda Ikeji finally reveals the father of her unborn baby. You wont believe who....

Celebrity blogger, Linda Ikeji seems to be enjoying the cloud surrounding the man in her life. She has made her followers curious over the suspense when, first, she conceded to an engagement rumour in late March, and two days ago, made public her pregnancy in a baby bump photo show with a lengthy online post on her love for kids.

Putting paid to the engagement rumour in March, Linda’s younger sister, Sandra had joined other celebrities to congratulate the blogger, lending credence to the news that she was affianced to a man described as a long-lost friend.
She said: “Congratulations @officialLindaIkeji So happy for you sweet sis! This tells me that sometimes the wait is worth it. Can’t wait to plan…”
A buildup to the blogger’s gradual transition into a family life happened on Sunday in a viral show of her baby bump.
“…Imagine that in a few months, I will look down at a baby, and it won’t be a neighbor’s child, a friend’s child, a sister’s child, but my own child, my own flesh and blood, carried in my womb. My own son. It’s surreal. I can’t get over it,” she said in the post.
According to Ikeji, “2018 started with me finding out I was pregnant. When I missed my period and my friend and I did a home pregnancy test and it read positive, my friend began to cry with happiness but I was just there staring at the stick like, you’re not messing with me, are you? This is real and not a joke on me, right? I refused to believe it and asked my friend to drive me to a lab for another test. And there it was confirmed, I was pregnant. Me, Linda, I am going to have my own child. Please don’t wake me up from this lovely dream..lol”
Ikeji who disclosed she is in her Trimester, announced she will be having a baby shower in a few weeks.
There are indications the suspense will linger until a marriage ceremony in a few months, where the man in her life will be unveiled.

Thursday 8 March 2018

Why is Bitcoin falling TODAY? Will it go back above 10k?

BITCOIN prices suffered an overnight blow, plunging by more than $1,000 on Wednesday evening to strike out below the $10,000 mark. But why are bitcoin prices falling today?

Bitcoin took a hit last night after the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) announced it will require digital asset exchanges to register with the federal agency.
Prices plunged by more than $1,000 in the space of an hour, falling from $10,673.03 at 4.40pm GMT to $9,481.45 by 5.22pm GMT on Wednesday, according to CoinDesk.
So far on Thursday the token has attempted to claw back its losses, kickstarting trading at $9,906.80 and peaking at $10,030.63 after 1am.
As of 8.33am bitcoin is exchanging hands for $9,865.37 – down 0.42 percent.The SEC announcement last night sparked fears of tighter cryptocurrency regulation, forcing traders to pull back.
According to the agency, digital assets moving through exchanges need to abide by federal laws, to protect investors’ best interests.
The SEC said in a statement: “If a platform offers trading of digital assets that are securities and operates as an 'exchange,' as defined by the federal securities laws, then the platform must register with the SEC as a national securities exchange or be exempt from registration.
“The SEC staff has concerns that many online trading platforms appear to investors as SEC-registered and regulated marketplaces when they are not.
Bitcoin price on CoinDesk: BTC tokenBitcoin pice chart: BTC token price on CoinDesk
COINDESK
Bitcoin price: traders pulled back after the SEC announced tighter regulation of exchanges
“Many platforms refer to themselves as 'exchanges', which can give the misimpression to investors that they are regulated or meet the regulatory standards of a national securities exchange.”
The SEC staff has concerns that many online trading platforms appear to investors as SEC-registered and regulated marketplaces when they are not
US Securities and Exchange Commission
The decision came in the wake of news hackers have caused “irregular trades” on Binance, one of the word’s biggest and most popular cryptocurrency exchanges.
Though Binance said no traders had their tokens stolen, the hack highlighted security issues that are present in the crypto sphere.
Some have now welcomed the SEC’s move in the wake of recent events, seeing it as a step in the right direction towards protecting customers.