Call for Abstract
Scientific Program
Annual Meet on Novel Coronavirus, will be organized around the theme “Ending the Pandemic and Building Back Better”
COVID-19 Congress is comprised of keynote and speakers sessions on latest cutting edge research designed to offer comprehensive global discussions that address current issues in COVID-19 Congress
Submit your abstract to any of the mentioned tracks.
Register now for the conference by choosing an appropriate package suitable to you.
Coronavirus (COVID-19) is a zoonotic disease. Zoonotic diseases are transmitted between creatures and humans. Diseases transmitted from animals to humans pose a significant threat to human health. COVID-19 is a reminder that human health and environmental health are closely related. There are about 8 million species of living things on earth, of which humans are just one. These include 1.7 million undetected viruses that are known to infect humans in mammals and waterfowl. If we do not take preventive measures now, any one of these will be transferred to humans. Greenhouse gas emissions — primarily caused by the burning of fossil fuels — cause changes in temperature and humidity that directly affect microbial survival.
Patients with suspicious common clinical signs of Kovid-19 such as fever, cough, sore throat, loss of taste or smell, malaise and myalgia should be tested immediately for SARS-CoV-2. In addition to symptomatic patients, patients with typical symptoms of Kovid-19 or anyone with high-risk exposure to SARS-CoV-2 should be tested for SARS-CoV-2 infection even if they have no symptoms.
- Innate immune response
- Adaptive immune response
- T-cells (cellular response)
- B-cells (antibody response)
Corona viruses are a group of related RNA viruses that cause diseases in mammals and birds. In humans and birds, they can cause mild to fatal respiratory infections. The common cold is a common illness in humans (it is caused by other viruses, mainly rhinoviruses), but the more deadly types are SARS, MERS, and COVID-19, which cause an on-going pandemic. They cause diarrhea in cows and pigs, and hepatitis and encephalomyelitis in rats. Coronaviruses belong to the subfamily Orthochoronavirin, in the family Coronaviridae, a sequence of nidoviruses and the ribavirin kingdom. They are viruses covered with a positive-sense single-stranded RNA gene and a nucleocapsid helical symmetry.
Important considerations for Contact tracing:
Contact is a person who is likely to get an infection from a positive case through any known transmission methods. If someone has a Covid-19 symptom, 2 to 14 days before the symptoms appear unless previously isolated. For asymptomatic or pre-symptomatic cases, the duration for contact tracing is taken from 2 days to 14 days after the date if not separated before sample collection.
A Combination of Impacts of Large economic RECESSION and Major food system DISRUPTIONS. Covid-19 affects the food and nutrition security of poor people unequally: they spend most of their income on food. Their main productive factor and property is physical activity. Covid-19 causes more disruptions in their (private) food value chains because it is more labor-intensive. Interruption to public social and nutrition programs. Preliminary estimates suggest that hundreds of thousands of people could die and millions will starve without a concerted effort to address food security issues. By October 2020, these efforts had reduced the risk of widespread starvation due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Droughts have caused panic as a result of the COVID-19 depression and some measures taken to prevent the spread of COVID-19.
Fear, anxiety, and stress are normal responses to perceived or real threats and sometimes when we encounter uncertainty or the unknown. So it is common and understandable that people are experiencing fear in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. Since the onset of the COVID-19 epidemic, unemployment and economic instability, disruption to education, social loneliness, fear of close partner and family violence, fear of life-threatening illness, and sudden loss of loved ones are all too common. All of these are risk factors for mental health conditions and behavioral problems such as depression and substance abuse disorders.
In addition to the fear of contracting a virus in an epidemic such as COVID-19, significant changes are made in our daily lives as our movements are restricted in support of efforts to stop and slow the spread of the virus. When faced with new realities such as working from home, temporary unemployment, having children at home, and not having physical contact with other family members, friends, and co-workers, we need to manage our mental, as well as our physical health.
- Bereavement
- Isolation
- Loss of income
- Insomnia
- Drug use
- Harmful alcohol
- Suicidal behaviour
Equal access to safe and effective vaccines is crucial to ending the COVID-19 epidemic, so many vaccines are very encouraging to prove and develop. The WHO is working tirelessly with partners to develop, manufacture and implement safe and effective vaccines. Safe and effective vaccines are a game changer: in the future, however, we must wear masks, wash our hands, ensure good ventilation inside the home, avoid physical contact, and avoid crowds. Vaccination does not mean that we can take care of the air and endanger ourselves and others; especially that research is still on going on how vaccines can protect us not only from disease but also from infection and transmission.
Vaccines save millions of lives each year and the COVID-19 vaccine can save your life. COVID-19 vaccines are safe and effective, providing strong protection against serious illness and death. COVID-19 vaccines are highly effective, but no vaccine provides 100% protection. Some people become infected with Covid-19 even after being vaccinated, while others become infected with the virus.
- Variant Being Monitored (VBM): Alpha (B.1.1.7 and Q lineages), Beta (B.1.351 and descendent lineages), Gamma, Epsilon, Eta, Iota, Zeta
- Variant of Interest (VOI)
- Variant of Concern (VOC): Delta, Omicron
- Variant of High Consequence (VOHC)
Most people who develop Kovid-19 will fully recover, but current evidence suggests that approximately 10% -20% of people experience a variety of intermediate and long-term effects after redeeming from their initial illness. These intermediate and long-term effects are collectively known as the post-COVID-19 condition or "long covid", refers to a combination of chronic symptoms that some people experience after having Kovid-19. People who experience the condition after COVID-19 sometimes call themselves "long-haulers". These symptoms can continue from their initial illness or develop after their recovery. They may come and go over time or come back. The condition after COVID-19 affects a person's ability to perform daily activities such as work or household chores.
Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) damages the lungs, brain, blood vessels, skin, nerves, kidneys, and heart, increasing the risk of chronic health problems. However, the virus can remain in the body for up to 3 months after diagnosis. This means that some people will get a second positive test result even after recovery, although this does not necessarily indicate that the virus is still contagious.
- Implement learning recovery programs
- Protect the education budget
- Prepare for future shocks by building back better