Showing posts with label Health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Health. Show all posts

Monday, 2 November 2020

England to Shut Pubs, Restaurants and Most Shops as Virus Surges

Bài báo England to Shut Pubs, Restaurants and Most Shops as Virus Surges
By Mark Landler and 

Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s cabinet proposed the move on Saturday as medical experts warned that the virus would soon overwhelm hospitals if the government did not take draconian action.

A largely empty street Saturday in Bradford, central England.Credit...Paul Ellis/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

LONDON — Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced plans on Saturday to shut down pubs, restaurants and most retail shops throughout England, a stark reversal in the face of grim projections that the country could face a deadly winter from the coronavirus unless it takes draconian action.

Mr Johnson presented the measures as part of a new tier of restrictions that will cover all of England. But the steps, which would take effect on Thursday and last until Dec. 2, amount to a nationwide lockdown — something Mr Johnson resisted for weeks because of the damage he said it would do to the economy.

“We’ve got to be humble in the face of nature,” Mr Johnson said at a hastily called news conference at 10 Downing Street. “In this county, alas, as across much of Europe, the virus is spreading even faster than the reasonable worst-case scenarios of our scientific advisers.”

The measures, announced after a tense day of meetings of Mr Johnson’s cabinet, would bring England into line with France, Germany, Belgium, and Ireland, all of which have shut down large parts of their countries in recent days amid a rapid-fire resurgence in infections.

As in March, when the virus first engulfed Europe, England has been slower to respond than some of its European neighbours. That equivocation, critics say, has deepened the misery for the country, which has suffered one of Europe’s highest death tolls and heaviest economic blows from the pandemic.

Even as the second wave of infections swept in last month, Mr Johnson was caught between a faction of his Conservative Party, which argued that another lockdown would devastate the economy, and his scientific advisers, who argued that it was unavoidable, given the exponential spread of the virus.


Under the current trajectory, the scientists said, hospitals would be stretched to capacity by the first week of December, even including the giant field hospitals that the government built, but never used, last spring.

Mr Johnson had initially planned to roll out the new measures this coming Monday, but reports of the government’s deliberations leaked out on Friday evening, forcing the prime minister to move up his timetable.

“They have no choice,” said Devi Sridhar, head of the global public health program at the University of Edinburgh. “It’s better today than tomorrow, and it would have been better yesterday than today.”



The government said the measures would be voted on by Parliament next Wednesday, and there were indications that some Conservatives would try to block them. But with an 80-seat majority in Parliament and the support of the opposition Labour Party, there was little chance that these measures wouldn’t be adopted.

To cushion the economy from the worst effects of the lockdown, Mr Johnson said the government would extend until December a wage-subsidy program for people whose jobs are threatened by the measures.

Under the plans, people would be required to stay at home unless their workplaces, such as factories or construction sites, need them. They would be allowed to go to school or college and leave home for a few other reasons, like buying food or seeking medical attention. But nonessential shops would be closed, people would be urged not to travel, except for business, and pubs and restaurants would only be allowed to serve to take out food.

Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland have already instituted similar restrictions, leaving England as an outlier within the United Kingdom.

Soho, London. The new measures would require bars, restaurants and most retail outlets to shut down.Credit...Andrew Testa for The New York Times

Until now, the prime minister’s approach had been to order targeted lockdowns in hot spots like the cities of Liverpool and Manchester, while allowing less affected places, like London, to operate more or less normally.

Mr Johnson called this strategy a “stitch in time to save nine,” though it did not mollify the authorities in those hard-hit cities, whose leaders complained bitterly that the government was singling them out unfairly.

But the latest numbers suggest the tailored approach was no longer enough.

The government’s scientific advisory panel, known as SAGE, estimated in a report dated Oct. 14 that there were between 43,000 and 75,000 new infections a day in England, a rate that is above the worst-case scenarios calculated only weeks before that. The virus has spread beyond the initial hot spots in the north of England.

Hospital admissions are also running ahead of the worst-case scenario, the panel said, raising the spectre that within weeks, the National Health Service will not be able to cope with the influx of patients. That could drive Britain’s virus-related death toll beyond the 85,000 that scientists estimated could be reached this winter.

On Saturday, Britain reported 21,915 new infections, passing a grim milestone of one million people who have tested positive. It admitted 1,444 patients to the hospital with symptoms of Covid-19, the disease caused by the virus. Nearly 1,000 patients are in intensive care units, while 326 people died on Saturday alone.

Britain’s total death toll from the virus is 58,925, one of the highest in Europe.

For weeks, politics has coloured the debate over how to curb the virus. The leader of the opposition Labour Party, Keir Starmer, called on Mr Johnson in mid-October to impose a two-week lockdown that scientists said would act as a “circuit breaker” on the chain of transmissions. He cited a report from SAGE that warned Britain faced a “very large epidemic with catastrophic consequences.”

At a flower market in London. The government’s scientific advisory panel estimated earlier this month that there are between 43,000 and 75,000 new infections a day in England.Credit...Andrew Testa for The New York Times

Mr Johnson accused Mr Starmer of failing to take into account the economic fallout from such a lockdown, which has led influential cabinet ministers, including the chancellor of the Exchequer, Rishi Sunak, to raise alarms.

Imposing the lockdown now, analysts said, could hurt Mr Johnson within his party because it will look like he is buckling to pressure from the opposition. But polls indicate that the British public is more sympathetic.

Locking down the economy in November is also a way to salvage Christmas. By cutting the transmission rate, the government could relax restrictions in December to allow families and friends to celebrate together.

British papers have been full of headlines about whether Mr Johnson will “cancel Christmas.” He has insisted that he wants university students to be reunited with their families during the holidays.

While medical experts generally applauded the planned lockdown, some questioned why the government did not act sooner, like during the midterm school break, which began earlier this month, as public health experts proposed.

Others said the government still had not fixed its test-and-trace system, which continues to fall far short of its goals. Until it does that, experts said, Britain would not be able to identify or break the chains of transmission — setting the stage for further outbreaks after the lockdown is lifted.

“You use lockdowns to build up test and tracing,” Ms Sridhar said. “We will be stuck in these cycles of lockdown and release until they decide we can’t live with this virus because it’s killing our economy.”







Saturday, 28 March 2020

Amazon delivery driver caught spitting on hand and wiping it on parcel

This article was published on Mirror.
A doorbell camera captured the moment an Amazon delivery driver appeared to spit into his hand and wipe it on a package he had delivered - which the recipients labelled 'reckless' during the current coronavirus pandemic.

spit (v) khạc, nhổ nước bọt, phun phì phèo, bắn(nước), tóe (lửa)
reckless (a)
- không lo lắng, không để ý tới; coi thường
reckless of consequence: không lo tới hậu quả
reckless of danger: không để ý tới nguy hiểm
- thiếu thận trọng, khinh suất, liều lĩnh, táo bạo
a reckless decision: một quyết định liều lĩnh

An Amazon delivery driver was filmed appearing to spit into his hand before wiping it on a package he had just left on the doorstep of a customer.
The recipients say they noticed the box was set when they went to retrieve the delivery and at first assumed a dog had urinated on it.
urinate ((v) to pass urine from the body
See: pee, piddle, wee (tất cả là động từ informal của urinate)
Daddy, I need to wee!

Checking video footage (cảnh quay video) from the doorbell camera (máy quay lắp ở gần chuông cửa chính), they were horrified to find what had really taken place.

The video was posted on social media to warn others following the incident in Los Angeles, which the recipient described as 'reckless' during the current coronavirus pandemic.

The customer quickly tried to decontaminate themselves after handling the package, before contacting the police and Amazon themselves to report the footage.

Conoravirus outbreak in Wuhan, Hubei, China

Bài này sẽ tổng hợp các nội dung liên quan đến bùng phát dịch bệnh cúm do một loại virus có tên là 2019-nCoV (Novel ConoraVirus) từ tháng 12 năm 2019. Mục đích chính của post là lưu lại các từ mới liên quan đến ngành dịch tễ (epidemiology /ˌep.ɪ.diː.miˈɒl.ə.dʒi/)

epidemiology /ˌep.ɪ.diː.miˈɒl.ə.dʒi/ (u. n.) the scientific study or diseases and how they are found, spread and controlled in groups of people = là một ngành khoa học về bệnh và về cách thức mà bệnh tìm ra, lây lan và kiểm soát trong những nhóm người.

epidemiologist (v) nhà dịch tễ học/bác sĩ dịch tễ

pneumonia /njuːˈməʊ.ni.ə/ (u. n.) a serious illness in which one or both lungs become red and swollen and filled with liquid = một bệnh nguy hiểm mà ở đó một hoặc hai lá phổi bị đỏ và sưng tấy và chứa nhiều chất lỏng (nước, dịch nhầy)
People who are bedridden can easily get pneumonia.
Những ai mà bị nằm liệt có thể dễ bị bệnh phổi.

scramble (v) xáo trộn, hỗn độn
Street vendors in Beijing wore masks on Sunday, the second day of the Lunar New Year. Businesses across the country are scrambling to understand conflicting rules about an extension to the holiday.
Nguồn: https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/27/world/asia/china-coronavirus.html

death toll: tỉ lệ chết
Death toll rises to 81 as China extends holiday.

outbreak: bùng phát dịch bệnh tầm quốc ta

epidemic: dịch bùng phát tầm khu vực, châu lục

pandemic (n) dịch bùng phát toàn cầu

How deadly is the virus? Vi rút gây chết người như thế nào?
High rates of pneumonia among the first people infected had many researchers worried that the Wuhan virus was especially pernicious.


Collection of terms related to SARS-CoV-2 or COVID-19

Từ vựng, thuật ngữ và cụm từ liên quan đến dịch bệnh SARS-CoV-2 hay COVID-19. Trong bài này, nội dung được thu lượm một cách rời rạc, bạn đọc theo dõi tự phân loại theo chủ đề mình quan tâm nhé.

confirmed cases: các ca bệnh được xác nhận
the highly infectious virus: vi rút có tính lây nhiễm cao
contaminate /kənˈtæm.ɪ.neɪt/
to make something less pure or make it poisonous: làm cho thứ gì đó độc = làm bẩn, làm ô uế; làm nhiễm bệnh; làm hư hỏng
The drinking water has become contaminated with lead. Nước uống vừa mới bị nhiễm chì.
a river contaminated by pollution: một dòng sông bị nhiễm bẩn do ô nhiễm
Synonym:
pollute
decontaminate (v) to remove dangerous substances from something = khử nhiễm, làm sạch
national lockdown: lệnh của chính phủ đóng cửa/cách ly/án binh bất động/nội bất xuất ngoại bất nhập quy mô toàn quốc
recover (v)
The agency said 66,414 people are infected with the virus, while another 10,950 people have recovered.
tested positive for COVID-19: được xét nghiệm dương tính vi rút COVID-19
Boris has been tested positive
epicentre (n) tâm động chấn
Italy's northern region of Lombardy has been the epicentre of the country's outbreak, reporting nearly 24,000 current positive cases alone.
measure (n) official action = an official action that is done in order to achieve a particular aim
* safety/security/austerity measures: những hành động bảo an
* drastic (a) extreme in a way that has a sudden, serious or violent effect on sth (khi một thứ gì đó mà drastic nghĩa là nó khắc nghiệt vô cùng nhưng ở một mức độ nào đó mà nó có hiệu quả tức thì, nghiêm túc và có phần ép buộc cưỡng bức) = mạnh mẽ, quyết liệt; to take drastic measures: dùng những biện pháp quyết liệt
* a temporary/an emergency measure: một hành động tạm thời/nguy cấp
~ (to do sth) We must take preventive measures to reduce crime in the area. Chúng ta phải thực hiện những biện pháp bảo vệ chính thức để giảm thiểu tội phạm trong vùng.
curb (v) to control or limit sth, especially sth bad = check
He needs to learn to curb his temper. Nó cần học cách kiềm chế cái tính cách nóng nảy.
tap (v) to choose sb to do a particular job
enforce (v) bắt buộc tuân theo; bắt tôn trọng; đem thi hành luật lệ
nationwide (n) khắp cả một quốc gia, toàn quốc
  - to launch a nationwide guerilla: phát động cuộc chiến tranh du kích trên khắp cả nước
  - anti-government leaflets were diffused nationwide: truyền đơn chống chính phủ được phổ biến khắp cả nước.
Rome has taken drastic measures to try to curb the spread of the highly infectious virus, including tapping its military to enforce a nationwide lockdown.
Rome vừa dùng các biện pháp quyết liệt để cố gắng để kiềm chế sự lây lan của vi rút mang tính chất lây lan cao độ, bao gồm việc đưa quân đội thực thi lệnh án binh bất động trên phạm vi toàn quốc.
Italy has had 86,498 total people tested positive for COVID-19, included those who have healed, a figure that surpasses that of China, where the pandemic first began.
Ý vừa có đến 86,498 bệnh nhân nhiễm dương tính với COVID-19, bao gồm cả những bệnh nhân vừa hồi phục, một con số vượt trội với con số của Trung Quốc nơi dịch bùng phát lần đầu tiên.
surpass (v) to do or better than sb/sth = hơn, vượt trội, vượt
  - He hopes one day to surpass the world record. Nó hy vọng vượt kỉ lục thế giới vào một ngày nào đó.
  - Its success has surpassed all expectations. Thành công của nó vượt trội trên cả mong đợi.
The U.S. has the largest number of total confirmed cases at more than 94,000.
Mỹ có tổng số ca nhiễm đã xác nhận là lớn nhất với hơn 94,000.
---
bring in (v) đưa vào
Soldiers are being brought in to enforce a lockdown in Italy as the country struggles to contain the exploding coronavirus outbreak within its borders.
* contain (v) ~ sth to prevent sth harmful from spreading or getting worse
to contain an epidemic: ngăn ngừa bùng phát dịch bệnh
Bộ đội đang được đưa vào để áp lệnh án binh bất động ở Ý khi mà nước này đang gặp trở ngại để ngăn cản sự gia tăng (climbing) bùng phát dịch bệnh coronavirus trong biên giới.

frontline workers, frontline health staff, frontline health workers: những nhân viên y tế ở tuyến đầu chống dịch bệnh
social carers

Tham khảo

  1. Italy tops 9,000 coronavirus deaths after reporting 919 fatalities in one day
  2. Military to enforce coronavirus lockdown in Italy | TheHill

Sunday, 23 February 2020

Best Collocations on Health

Bài này muốn giới thiệu một số collocations hay về sức khỏe.


  1. Enjoy good health
    Có một sức khỏe tốt
    People who exercise often enjoy good health.
    According to the WHO, the higher a person's socioeconomic status (SES), the more likely they are to enjoy good health, a good education, a well-paid job, afford good healthcare when their health is threatened.
    (From https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/150999)
  2. Reduce your stress levels
    Giải tỏa căng thẳng
    You should go away somewhere to reduce your stress levels.
  3. Build strength and muscle
    Xây dựng một sức mạnh tốt
    You should play sports to build good strength.
  4. Do plenty of exercises
    Tập thể dục nhiều
    He is strong because he does plenty of exercises.
  5. Gentle exercise
    Tập thể dục nhẹ nhàng
    My father keeps fit just by having gentle exercise on a daily basis.
  6. Build up resistance to diseases
    Xây dựng sức đề kháng với bệnh tật
    Taking in enough nutrition helps you build up resistance to diseases.
  7. Go on a diet
    Tuân theo một chế độ ăn uống
    Those who are overweight are advised to go on a diet.
  8. Make a full recovery
    Hồi phục hoàn toàn
    He made a full recovery in just three days after the accident.
  9. A course of medication
    Khóa học (y) dược
    As health problems get more and more sophisticated, more and more people decided to take on a course of medication.
  10. Side effects
    Tác dụng/hiệu ứng phụ
    People using antibiotics should be well aware of their side effects.
  11. Adverse reactions
    Phản ứng tiêu cực/ngược
    Overdosing of medicine will bring adverse reactions.
    Dùng thuốc quá liều sẽ phản tác dụng.
  12. Consult a doctor
    Tham khảo ý kiến bác sĩ
    I think it's high time you consulted a doctor.
    Tôi nghĩ đã đến lúc bạn cần tham khảo ý kiến bác sĩ.
  13. Be in poor health in months/years
    Sức khỏe kém trong nhiều tháng/năm
    He passed away after being in poor health in years.
  14. Face health problems
    Đối mặt với những vấn đề sức khỏe
    If you keep living this way, you will soon face a lot of health problems.
  15. Suffer from serious (eye/heart/...) diseases.
    Mắc bệnh nghiêm trọng về (mắt/tim/...)
    The sedentary lifestyle of ours makes us more and more likely to suffer from heart diseases.

Sunday, 16 February 2020

What are zoonotic diseases

Zoonotic infections
Zoonotic diseases (also known as zoonoses) are caused by infections that spread between animals and people.
Bệnh động vật truyền sang người bị gây ra bởi sự lây nhiễm truyền giữa động vật và con người.


Every year, tens of thousands of Americans will get sick from diseases spread between animals and people. These are known as zoonotic diseases. Zoonotic means infectious diseases that are spread between animals and people. Because these diseases can cause sickness or death in people, CDC is always tracking and reporting them.
Hàng năm, vài chục nghìn người Mỹ mắc bệnh vì các bệnh lan truyền giữa người và động vật. Những căn bệnh này còn có tên gọi là bệnh lan truyền người và động vật. Zoonotic nghĩa là các căn bệnh truyền nhiễm lan truyền giữa người và động vật. Bởi vì các căn bệnh này gây bệnh cho con người hoặc gây chết người cho nên CDC luôn luôn theo dõi và báo cáo.

Wednesday, 11 January 2017

Medicine Vocabulary

Một số từ vựng mô tả các dụng cụ dùng trong y tế:

Tuesday, 10 January 2017

Cough

Pronunciation

verb [I] UK /kɒf/ US /kɑːf/ (Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary & Thesaurus)
Kết thúc là gh nhưng bạn phải phát âm nhẹ f cuối từ. Một số từ giống dạng này như:
  • laugh [lɑːf]
  • rough [rʌf]
Image courtesy of http://www.mnn.com/health/fitness-well-being/stories/10-natural-cough-remedies

About cough

This section presents information of cough extracted mostly from the page of NHS, UK about cough and rephrased with respect to the literary style (văn phong - basic writing style) of blog's owner. 

Introduction

  • Can not treated with antibiotics or other medicine as it is likely to be a residual symptom of other condition.
  • Cause by adenovirus - the micro behind conditions such as bronchitis, pneumonia and gastroenteritis
  • It's taking three to four weeks for people to completely recover and clear up within three weeks.
  • The NHS recommends seeing a GP if a cough lasts for more than three weeks.
  • A tip is to improve hand hygiene to stop spread to others and to your own eyes. Otherwise it is a question of staying indoors in the warm because cold air stirs up the cough reflux. 
Whooping cough:
  • Causes repeated coughing bouts that can last for two three months or more ans can make babies and young children in particular very ill.
  • Is spread in the droplets of the coughs or sneeze of someone with the infection.
  • Symptoms of whooping cough: similar to those of a cold, such as runny nose, red watery eyes, a sore throat and a slightly raises temperature.
Video này mô tả triệu chứng trẻ bị whooping cough

Related words

  • cough drops: thuốc ho dạng nước
  • dry cough: thuốc ho dạng viên
  • cough syrup: thuốc ho dạng siro
  • whooping cough: bệnh ho gà
  • hacking cough: ho hắc 
  • bronchitis: bệnh viêm phế quản
  • pneumonia: bệnh viêm phổi
  • gastroenteritis: bệnh đau dạ dày, bao tử
The article [1] said that the cough
http://www.mirror.co.uk/lifestyle/health/cough-medicine-waste-money-nhs-4444541

Thursday, 11 February 2016

Health

Những từ ngữ thường dùng để mô tả đau, bệnh, tai nạn,...
bruise: a purple and brown mark on your skin after hitting
vết bầm tím, vết thâm tím

injection: a piece of material put a medicine into your body using a needle
tiêm thuốc, chích thuốc

burn: to be injury by fire or heat
vết bỏng 

bandage: a piece of paper that you tie around a wound and injured part of your body
miếng băng gạt để băng vết thương


cough: to force air up through you throat with a short loud sound
ho

ointment: a oily substance applied to the skin or heal or protect
thuốc mỡ bôi da

prescription: a piece of paper that a doctor gives you that says what type of medicine you should have, list medicine
toa thuốc 

wound: an injury part of body, especially to cut
vết thương, thương tích 

contagious: describes someone who has a contagious disease
bệnh lây nhiễm

sedative: a drug used to make someone sleep and calm
thuốc ngủ, thuốc an thần

symptom: a characteristic sign that someone has an illness
triệu chứng, dấu hiệu

nausea/ queasy: feeling of sickness in stomache
buồn nôn



sneeze: often happen when you have a cold and blocked nose
hắt hơi,

disease: an illness of the body in human, animal or plants, often caused by infection
bệnh tật

fracture: a break or crack in a bone
đau khớp

unconscious: similar to sleep when you don't see, feel, think...usually as a result of an accident or injury
hôn mê, bất tỉnh, vô ý thức

bleeding: to lose blood because of injured
mất máu, chảy máu

vomit: matter vomited from stomache.
ói mửa

dizzy: feeling turn around
hoa mắt, chóng mặt

faint: feeling might fall over
uể oải, mệt lã

rash: a small red spots in skin
phát ban đỏ

itching: feeling uncomfortable on the skin which want to makes rub with nail
ngứa 

conjunctivitis: a painful infection of the eyes which makes them red and makes eyelids swollen and strictly
bệnh đau mắt đỏ  

Saturday, 6 February 2016

Talking about illness


If you are ill, it is important to able to describe what is wrong with you. This part look at some vocabulary to use at the doctor's. It offer some basic, general word for describe medicine problems.
Từ ill thường được sử dụng trong British English, trong khi từ sick lại thường sử dụng trong American English. Nếu khi người Anh nói were sick thì có nghĩa là vomited.

Symptoms

Symptoms are thing that show you have an ill. For example for symptom of a cold include sneezing, coughing, a sore throat, a runny nose or a blocked nose or stuffed-up nose.
We often use verb have and feel to describe our symptoms:
  • I feel tired all the time.
  • I have a headache.
sử dụng "feel" are dizzy, faint, sick, or queasy, nauseous
Ta vẫn hay sử dụng I'm have trouble, theo sau là - V-ing or with:
  • I'm have trouble sleeping.
  • I'm have trouble with my knees.
thỉnh thoảng ta thường sử dụng:
  • My leg/finger hurts.
  • I have a pain in my foot/ear.
A dull pain or ache is unpleasant but not severe and usually continuous. A sharps or stabbing pain is usually more painful and may be intermittent
A part of the body that hurts, when you touch it is sore or tender while if you can't feel it at all, it is numb. If part of the body is bigger than normal, it is swollen. Small, red mark on the skin are called a rash, and if you feel you you want to scratch them, they are itchy.
If blood is coming from  part of your body, you say that it is bleeding. If you feel over because you were dizzy, you fainted and if you remained in a condition where you could not see or think, you were unconscious.
To talk about how an illness started, you could say that it came on gradually or came on suddenly. You also want to explain these symptom worse or better:
  • standing for long period make it worse.
  • painkiller helps it a bit.

Vocabulary

  • vomited: matter vomited from stromache, ói mửa.
  • dizzy: as though room in turning around, chóng mặt, hoa mắt.
  • faint: as though you might fall over , uể oải, ngất.
  • queasy/nauseous: as though you might vomit buồn nôn.
  • hurt: feel pain in part of body. bị thương, vết thương.
  • dull pain: describe a sound or pain that is not sharp or clear, âm ỉ.
  • severe: causing very great pain , difficult, damage...very serious, khốc liệt, dữ dội.
  • sharp: happen suddenly, quickly and strongly đau đớn.
  • stabbing: sudden sharp feeling or pain  đột ngột, đau nhói.
  • intermittent: not happen regularly or continuously, stopping and starting repeating or with period in between, thỉnh thoảng, không thường xuyên, lúc có lúc không.
  • sore: painful and uncomfortable because of injury, infection or too much use, đau.
  • tender: painful, sore uncomfortable when touched, nhạy cảm.
  • numb: if your part of body is numb, you unable to feel it, usually use a short time, tê cứng.
  • bleeding: lose blood from body as a result of injury or illness., chảy máu.
  • unconscious: in the state of having lost conscious, especially as a result of a head injury, không ý thức, vô thức.
  • scratch: to cut or damage a surface or your skin slightly with or on something sharp or rough, vết xước, trầy xước.
  • gradually: slowly over a period of time ow distance, dần dần, từ từ.
  • rash: a lot of small red spots on skin, phát ban đỏ.

Wednesday, 3 February 2016

Medicine Vocabulary Part 2

Bổ sung thêm từ vựng về Medicine:
  • rash /ræʃ/ n, chứng phát ban, a lot of small red spots on skin
  • itching /ˈɪtʃ.ɪŋ/ n, ngứa ngáy, an uncomfortable feeling on the skin which makes you want to rub it with your nail
  • conjunctivitis /kənˌdʒʌŋk.tɪˈvaɪ.tɪs/ n, bệnh đau mắt đỏ, viêm màng kết, a painfull infection of the eyes which makes them red and makes the eyelids swollen and sticky.
  • microcephaly: n, sự nhỏ đầu, abnormal smallness of the head
  • outbreak: bùng nổ, a sudden beginning of something, especially of disease or something else dangerous or unpleasant
  • joint paint: đau khớp
  • paralysis: /pəˈræl.ə.sɪs/ n, tê liệt, unable to move or action
  • disorder /dɪˈsɔː.dər/n, sự rối loạn ở 1 chức năng nào đó, an illness of the mind or body

Wednesday, 27 January 2016

Medical Vocabulary Part 1


Gom lại một số từ vựng về Medicine cho dễ nhớ:
  • antibiotic /ˌæn.ti.baɪˈɒt.ɪk/: n, thuốc kháng sinh
  • respiratory /rɪˈspɪr.ə.tər.i/ : n, hô hấp
  • infection/ɪnˈfek.ʃən/: n, nhiễm trùng
  • crucial /ˈkruː.ʃəl/ a, extremedy important or necessary., rất quan trọng
  • prescribe /prɪˈskraɪb/ v, give medicine kê toa, liệt kê
  • prescription /prɪˈskrɪp.ʃən/ n, toa thuốc, list medicine
  • pressurized /ˈpreʃ.ər.aɪzd/ a, điều áp
  • resistance /rɪˈzɪs.təns/ n, sức đề kháng, against something or someone that is attacked you
  • lethal /ˈliː.θəl/ a, gây chết người, able to cause or causing death, extremedy dangerous
  • strain /streɪn/ a, sự căng thẳng, feel nervous or worried about something
  • circulate /ˈsɜː.kjʊ.leɪt/ v, tuần hoàn, lan truyền, go around
  • definitive /dɪˈfɪn.ɪ.tɪv/ a, cuối cùng, hay nhất, chung cuộc, not able to questioned or improved, final, complete or best
  • incredibly /ɪnˈkred.ɪ.bli/ adv, extremedy
  • incredibly useful: vô cùng hữu ích
  • diagnosis /ˌdaɪ.əɡˈnəʊ.sɪs/ n, chẩn đoán, to recognize and name of character of a disease or a problem, by making an examination.
  • accurate /ˈæk.jʊ.rət/ a, exact, correct without any mistakes.
  • struck off: v, gạch tên, xóa bỏ
  • mainstay: trụ cột, thành phần chính
  • inappropriate /ˌɪn.əˈprəʊ.pri.ət/ a, unsuitable, không thích hợp, không phù hợp
  • affordable /əˈfɔː.də.bəl/ a, giá cả phải chăng, not expensive
  • dependable a, đáng tin cậy
  • curb /kɜːb/ , v, kiềm chế, to control or something limited
  • painkiller /ˈpeɪnˌkɪl.ər/, n, thuốc giảm đau
  • sufferer /ˈsʌf.ər.ər/, n, người bị bệnh
  • flu sufferer : n, người mắc bệnh cúm
  • pain /peɪn/, n, đau nhức
  • aches /eɪk/, mỏi mệt
  • remedy /ˈrem.ə.di/,n biện pháp khắc phục
  • symptom /ˈsɪmp.təm/, n , dấu hiện, triệu chứng
  • anti-flu drug :n, thuốc chống cúm
  • sepsis /ˈsep.sɪs/ n, nhiễm trùng huyết
  • runny nose: n, chảy nước mũi
  • cold - like: cảm lạnh
  • throat : n, cổ họng
  • sneeze :n, hắt hơi

Thursday, 21 January 2016

Blood test can now tell if antibiotics are needed for infections

A simple blood test can tell within an hour whether antibiotics are needed for throat infections Photo: ALAMY

Doctors may soon be able to perform a simple blood test to check if a patient needs antibiotics

Một số từ vựng cho chủ đề này:
- antibiotic /ˌæn.ti.baɪˈɒt.ɪk/: n, thuốc kháng sinh
- respiratory /rɪˈspɪr.ə.tər.i/ : n, hô hấp
- infection/ɪnˈfek.ʃən/: n, nhiễm trùng
- crucial /ˈkruː.ʃəl/ a, extremedy important or necessary., rất quan trọng
- prescribe /prɪˈskraɪb/ v, give medicine kê toa, liệt kê
- prescription /prɪˈskrɪp.ʃən/ n, toa thuốc
- pressurized /ˈpreʃ.ər.aɪzd/ a, điều áp
- resistance /rɪˈzɪs.təns/ n, sức đề kháng
- lethal /ˈliː.θəl/ a, gây chết người
- strain /streɪn/ a, sự căng thẳng
- circulate /ˈsɜː.kjʊ.leɪt/ v, tuần hoàn, lan truyền, go around
- definitive /dɪˈfɪn.ɪ.tɪv/ a, cuối cùng, hay nhất, chung cuộc
- incredibly /ɪnˈkred.ɪ.bli/ adv, extremedy
- incredibly useful: vô cùng hữu ích
- diagnosis /ˌdaɪ.əɡˈnəʊ.sɪs/ n, chẩn đoán
- accurate /ˈæk.jʊ.rət/ a, exact, correct without any mistakes.
- struck off: v, gạch tên, xóa bỏ
- mainstay: trụ cột, thành phần chính
- inappropriate /ˌɪn.əˈprəʊ.pri.ət/  a, unsuitable, không thích hợp, không phù hợp
- affordable /əˈfɔː.də.bəl/ a, giá cả phải chăng, not expensive 
- dependable a, đáng tin cậy
- curb /kɜːb/ , v, kiềm chế, to control or something limited


A test which can tell if respiratory infections are caused by viruses or bacteria could prove crucial in the fight against antibiotic resistance.
Duke University in the US has discovered that genes react differently when they are working to fight of viruses or bacterial infections.
It means that doctors could take a simple blood test and known within an hour whether they should prescribe antibiotics or not.
Most respiratory infections are caused by viruses, against which antibiotics are completely ineffective. Yet doctors in Britain still write 10 million prescriptions each year for coughs and colds, often because they feel pressurised by patients.
“GPs are under a lot of pressure from patients to prescribe antibiotics, even when we know they are not the most appropriate course of action."
Dr Tim Ballard, Vice Chair for the Royal College of GPs
Health experts have warned that antibiotic resistance could send medicine back to the dark ages, with even the smallest infections proving lethal, and strains of salmonella and E.coli are now circulating in Britain which are resistant to our last line of drugs.
However armed with the new test, doctors could give patients a definitive reason why the drugs will not work. British doctors said NHS patients had formed a 'worrying reliance' on antibiotics and the test would be 'incredibly useful.'
"A respiratory infection is one of the most common reasons people come to the doctor," said lead author Dr Ephraim Tsalik, assistant professor of medicine at Duke Health in North Carolina.
"We use a lot of information to make a diagnosis, but there's not an efficient or highly accurate way to determine whether the infection is bacterial or viral.
“About three-fourths of patients end up on antibiotics to treat a bacterial infection despite the fact that the majority have viral infections. There are risks to excess antibiotic use, both to the patient and to public health."
Antibiotics  Photo: ALAMY
Last year the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice) said that doctors must stop prescribing antibiotics for minor infections and warned GPs they could even be struck off if they failed to bring the problem under control.
Antibiotics have been the mainstay of treating infections for more than 60 years but although a new infectious disease has been discovered nearly every year over the past 30 years, no new antibiotics have come to market for 15 years.
Nationally 41.6 million antibiotic prescriptions were issued in 2013/14 at a cost to the NHS of £192 million. But a quarter of them are likely to be inappropriate or unnecessary.
Dr Tim Ballard, Vice Chair for the Royal College of GPs, said: “Effective, reliable, point of care testing to determine whether an infection is viral or bacterial would be incredibly useful for GPs and patients, particularly about making a decision as to whether to prescribe antibiotics, or not.
“GPs are under a lot of pressure from patients to prescribe antibiotics, even when we know they are not the most appropriate course of action. Recent research has even shown that GPs receive lower satisfaction scores from patients, if they decide not to prescribe these drugs.
“The fact is, antibiotics can be very effective as long as they are prescribed properly and used appropriately, but as a nation we have developed a worrying reliance on them. Anything that can be done to reduce this should be encouraged so that we can all benefit from antibiotics when we really need them.
“This research is very important as we move forward in developing tests that are both dependable and affordable, and can help curb the global trend of growing resistance to antibiotics. To this end, we also need more research like this, especially based in primary care, as well as the urgent development of new antibiotics to protect the public against emerging bacterial resistance causing infection in the future.
“We also need to work together to ensure that our patients and the public are aware of the risks associated with inappropriate use of antibiotics and how to use them responsibly, to increase the chances of them working when they might really need them.”
The test looks for genetic signatures in a patient’s blood to indicated whether someone is fighting off an infection from a virus or bacteria. It was found to be 87 per cent accurate in classifying more than 300 patients with flu, the common cold or strep infections.
More precise ways of distinguishing infections could not only reduce unnecessary use of antibiotics, but also lead to more precise treatments of viruses.
"The ideal scenario, should this test ultimately be approved for broad use, is you would go to the doctor's office and receive your results by the time you meet with your provider," said senior Dr Christopher Woods, professor of medicine and associate director of Duke's genomics center.
"We are working to develop a test that could be run in most clinical labs on existing equipment. We believe this could have a real impact on the appropriate use of antibiotics and guide the use of antiviral treatments in the future."
Lord O’Neill, Chairman of the government's Review on Antimicrobial Resistance added: “Rapid diagnostics that can help reduce unnecessary use of antibiotics are vital if we are to win the battle against Antimicrobial Resistance.
"It is always encouraging to hear of progress on this front but, as my review on Antimicrobial Resistance has recommended, we need further incentives for diagnostics to expedite their development and uptake.”
The research was published in the journal Science Translational Medicine.