Réintégrés enfin après 560 jours SANS AUCUN DROIT !
Le gouvernement Francais avait crée un statut spécial pour les soignants, les pompiers et même certains personnels hospitaliers ou médico-sociaux NON vaccinés : SUSPENSION !
Pas de salaire, aucune indemnité, pas de revenu minimum, pas de droit au chômage, pas de droit à la formation, pas de cotisation retraite, pas de licenciement consensuel. Jamais l'Etat n'était allé aussi loin dans une sanction au mépris même du fait connu et reconnu que la vaccination ne protégeait absolument pas de la contamination par le Sars Cov2. Présentée comme une mesure sanitaire, elle n'était que politique. "Ethique" ont ils même osé dire alors qu'imposer ces vaccins, en phase expérimentale de l'aveu même de leurs fabricants, dérogeait à l'ensemble des droits et des chartes en vigueur depuis Nuremberg ...
Ces suspendus ont subi une mort sociale cruelle, lente, injuste et une indignation sans précedent dans l'indifférence quasi générale.
560 jours ! PLUS JAMAIS CA... Mais on a juré nos grands Dieux tant de fois que ces 3 mots sont à jamais galvaudés !
Merci pour vos avis quels qu'ils soient à condition qu'ils restent respectueux.
Knowledge, attitude, and practice towards hepatitis B and C viruses among the population of Lubumbashi, Democratic Republic of Congo
https://salemyoussefmohamed.blogspot.com/2023/02/knowledge-attitude-and-practice-towards.html
Authors
ARSENE AKT KABAMBA 1 Henry Manya 2 Cedrick Mutombo 2 Christian Kasongo 2 Christian CK Kakisingi 3 Serge Matanda 4 Augustin Mutombo 4 Claude CM Mwamba 3 Arthur Ngulu Nsasi 5 Benoit BK KABAMBA 6 Albert AL Longanga 7
aClinical Biology Laboratory, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Université de Lubumbashi, Lubumbashi-DRC. bCenter of excellence and expertise for viral hepatitis and other pathologies, Lubumbashi-DRC. cLaboratory of Pharmacognosy and natural substances, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Université de Lubumbashi, Lubumbashi-DRC. dFaculty of Medicine, Université de Lubumbashi, Lubumbashi-DRC. e Institut Supérieur des Techniques Médicales of Uvira, Uvira-DRC fFaculty of Veterinary Medicine, Université de Lubumbashi, Lubumbashi-DRC. g Institute of Experimental and Clinical Research (IREC), Pole of Microbiology, Université Catholique de Louvain, Brussels, Belgium.
Abstract
Background
Hepatitis B (HBV) and C (HCV) infection remains significant public health problem worldwide. Unfortunately, the Democratic Republic of Congo is in an area of high endemicity, and its population remains poorly informed about these viral infections. Therefore, this study aims to determine Lubumbashi's knowledge, attitudes, and practices toward HBV and HCV.
Methods
We conducted a cross-sectional descriptive study from March to August 2022 in Lubumbashi. A total of 704 participants were enrolled. We targeted all people of both sexes and ages. The participants' Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices (KAP) survey was assessed using online and printed or paper questionnaires. Data were analyzed using SPSS version 22 software.
Results
Of the 704 participants, 70.9% had poor knowledge of viral hepatitis B and C, whereas 28.6% had terrible attitudes towards these infections and preferred to consult traditional healers instead of going to the hospital. A minority of the participants (12.2%) had good practices, those as being screened regularly to exclude any possible infection and being willing to be vaccinated depending on the availability of the HBV vaccine. Most participants (69.2%) needed to be aware of drugs that could effectively treat these infections.
Conclusion
Knowledge and practice about HBV and HCV in the Congolese population living in Lubumbashi have proven wrong. Similarly, the attitudes of the people towards these infections were negative. Therefore, an extensive health education program should be given to increase the awareness of this part of the Congolese population about HBV and HCV infection to provide better care.
Vaccin COVID bivalent
Bonjour ,
Je suis médecin généraliste en Belgique , actuellement nos instances officielles ne parlent pratiquement plus du COVID , à part le fait qu' elles nous demandent de ne faire des tests que chez les personnes à risques majeurs . Il n' y a plus de campagne de sensibilisation médiatique quant aux précautions à prendre et surtout plus un mot sur la vaccination . Il faut savoir que je suis pour la vaccination , non pas comme prévention de la maladie elle-même mais bien contre les complications éventuelles de celle-ci . J' encourage donc mes patients à y réfléchir . Hors actuellement j' arrive chez mes patients plus à risques à 5 à 6 mois de leur dernières injections, ce qui me semble un délais raisonnable pour leur proposer de "booster" . J' aimerais connaître un peu la politique de vos pays respectifs quant à la vaccination , les délais recommandés entre les différentes injections et certainement votre avis . Je précise que je ne désire pas un débat sur le vaccin en lui même mais bien l' avis des personnes qui sont convaincues de l' efficacité de celui-ci et de l' opportunité ou non de le maintenir . Je vous remercie de votre attention et vos éventuelles réponses .
Dr P. Gosselin.
Bon, je vais être plus clair, mon opinion sur la vaccination est faite , celle-ci n' est pa apparue par une illumination quelconque mais bien après consultations de différents articles scientifiques, l' expérience personnelle de soins de patients (en n'oubliant pas que la plupart des cas de COVID ont été traités en médecine générale , ce ne sont que les complications qui ont dû être hospitalisées ) , en consultant et questionnant mes confrères infectiologues, de médecines internes,.......et que sais-je encore . Cela pour dire que ma question n' a rien à voir avec un débat sur vaccination ou pas , je pense qu' il y en a déjà eu assez et de toute façon ce sera dans bien des années que l' on pourra en tirer d' éventuelles conclusions . Donc ceux qui sont contre la vaccination ne sont pas concernés par ma question , ils ont fait un choix que je respecte , mais leur réponse sera de ne pas vacciner s' ils suivent leurs convictions .
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I feel so alone........am I the only one who was taught the following............if a virus kills its host it dies too.
The virus has mutated to something less serious in the population in general, including the elderly and at risk groups. There will always be some who get more ill than others.
More worrying is the impact of the supposed vaccine. Are some of your problems related to the 'cure'?
Even more worrying, for me at least, is the misinformation still being pushed at health professionals and the general public. Some of these people have realised that we were manipulated, so when we really have a worldwide crisis the vast majority will no longer believe the medical profession is honourable.
BIG sigh
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Is this being used as a cover tactic for more mRNA vaccine production?
Forgive my suspicious nature.
And whatever happened to the comments of a 'it moves to where you have a weakness '. Clearly little research done in that field because it makes no profit for drug companies.
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Hello dear colleague! Not lymphoma, but gastric, thyroid, pancreas and colon maligan neoplasia, I've already had diagnoses after Pfizer and Astrazenica vaccines.
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Top medical experts call for national inquiry into Canada's COVID-19 'failures'
Three and a half years after the virus behind COVID-19 began its rampage around the world — eventually killing tens of thousands of Canadians — a group of top medical experts is calling on federal officials to launch a full national inquiry into Canada's pandemic response.In a sweeping set of editorials and analysis papers published today in the British Medical Journal (BMJ), more than a dozen physicians and health advocates are shining a spotlight on what they've dubbed the country's "major pandemic failures," from the devastation in long-term care homes, to vaccine hoarding, to higher death rates among lower-income communities. Those shortcomings all played out against the backdrop of the country's complex, fragmented health-care system. That decentralized approach, the authors argue, led to dramatic differences in how each province handled the spread of SARS-CoV-2, the virus first reported in Canada in Jan. 2020.
When compared with the "shambolic" U.K. response and the "chaos and divisiveness" of the U.S., Canada appeared to rise to the occasion when COVID hit, wrote several authors in an introductory editorial, including Dr. Jocalyn Clark, a Canadian physician who is currently the BMJ's international editor. Yet the reality, the papers explain, remains far more nuanced, with the full scope of successes and failures still unclear. "We wouldn't know because no pandemic inquiry has been established by its federal government," the group continued. "This is a mistake."
The most important reason for an inquiry, the group stated, is accountability for the losses of the pandemic, after more than 50,000 direct deaths, millions of additional infections that "devastated families" across Canada, and a lasting legacy of Long COVID patients...Read more
How important is an inquiry like this in your opinion?
Ontario government plans to recoup COVID-19 loans to province's doctors
Province laid out plans to recoup money in memo issued to Ontario Medical Association on Friday. Ontario doctors who received loans from the province during the COVID-19 pandemic in order to cover increased costs and offset revenue losses stemming from lower patient volumes will now have one year to pay those sums back.
The province said it is "critical" to recover more than $521 million in outstanding loan payments from the COVID-19 Advance Payment Program in order to fund other priorities. The combination of low COVID-19 infection rates and strong vaccine uptake throughout the province suggests the time is right to "transition to a post-pandemic state," it added."When we introduced this program, we were clear that these payments would need to be paid back, as is the case with any loan," the memo stated. "These funds are critical for important priorities like expanding access to team-based primary care, home care, mental health services and shortening wait times for key surgeries and procedures."
Beginning next month, the Ministry of Health will recover that money by deducting pay from physicians' monthly OHIP payments over a one-year period, rather than the original five-month timeline it first proposed, with no interest charged."The ministry has conducted an analysis against providers' recent billings and is extremely confident in the ability for those who still owe to repay any outstanding loans," it said in the memo...Read more
How do you feel about this?
Canada preparing for fall rollout of new Omicron COVID-19 vaccine
British Columbia is preparing for a fall rollout of an updated COVID-19 vaccine, tailored specifically to the Omicron variant. Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry emphasized that the new vaccine should be seen as an annual immunization similar to the flu shot, rather than just a booster dose. The recommendation from the National Advisory Committee on Immunization (NACI) suggests that Canadians should receive the updated vaccine if it has been six months since their last dose or COVID-19 infection. The aim is to provide protection against the strains circulating in Canada and globally, building upon the immunity gained from previous vaccinations. The province plans to make the vaccination process easy and convenient, and anyone who wants the vaccine will be offered it. With the anticipation of a potential fall surge of the virus, health officials are urging the public to stay informed and take advantage of this updated vaccine to help combat COVID-19 and ensure community protection...Read More
What are your thoughts?