N95 خرید ماسک

n95 خرید ماسک, Insight from Dr. Amy Compton-Phillips, executive vice president and chief clinical officer at Providence St. Joseph Health. Los Angeles leaders warned of bigotry against the Asian community on Thursday after several incidents of bullying and orchestrated hoaxes over the novel coronavirus were reported in the area. More than 64,000 people have been sickened by the COVID-19 virus and over 1,300 people have died, mostly in mainland China. Los Angeles has only one confirmed case. “We’re not going to stand for hate,” Los Angeles County Supervisor Hilda Solis told reporters at a news conference.

n95 خرید ماسک - CHINA'S CORONAVIRUS SURVIVORS MAY FACE MENTAL HURDLES ONCE OUTBREAK ENDS Fears over the virus have resulted in hoaxes and hostilities against the region's Asian community, the largest in the United States. A petition urging schools in the suburb of Alhambra to cancel classes over the virus had 14,000 signatures. A boy of Asian descent needed an MRI after he was bullied and beaten this month at a San Fernando Valley school, said Robin Toma, the executive director of the county's Human Relations Commission, which works on hate crime prevention, the LAist reported.

n95 خرید ماسک, In Carson, a flyer with a fake seal of the World Health Organization told residents to avoid Asian-American businesses like Panda Express because of the outbreak, according to Reuters. Toma said people wearing face masks have also had insults hurled at them. He urged anyone being targeted because of their race to report the incident to authorities. “We need you to step up and speak out when you see it happening to others,” he said. CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP China has suffered the vast majority of coronavirus cases since the outbreak first began in the Hubei province in December. There are 15 confirmed cases in the U.S.

n95 خرید ماسک - Frank Wucinski and his three-year-old daughter A​​​​​​​nnabel tell 'America's Newsroom' about their experience with coronavirus Three-year-old Annabel Wucinski was readmitted to the hospital and is undergoing coronavirus testing for the second time since she and her father Frank Wucinski evacuated from the disease's epicenter of Wuhan, China. Wucinski's father-in-law passed away recently from the deadly virus. Wucinski, a U.S. citizen, and his sticker-loving daughter had originally tested negative for the disease – now known as COVID-19 – after landing at the Miramar Airbase in San Diego, Calif., where they've been quarantined.

n95 خرید ماسک - Appearing on America's Newsroom with host Ed Henry, Wucinski said Friday that Annabel was feeling fine. CORONAVIRUS CASES EXCEED 64K GLOBALLY, DEATH TOLL NEARS 1,400 IN CHINA The doctors say so far – you know they did chest X-rays and other tests, oxygen level tests – they all came back normal, he told Henry. So, we are just waiting for the CDC to come back with the test results for the coronavirus. Wucinski and his family have lived in China for over 15 years and spent two-thirds of that time in Wuhan where his wife's family lives. Wucinski and his wife – who is not a U.S. citizen – moved to Guangzhou for work, but after his mother-in-law passed away three months ago the three returned to Wuhan to take care of his father-in-law.