RECENT ARTICLES

Bali's coronavirus outbreak was so under control, they welcomed tourists. Now cases are exploding - ABC News
Print contentPrint with images and other mediaPrint text onlyPrintCancelBebalang village is best known to tourists as a stop on Bali's Eat, Pray, Love tour for fans of Elizabeth Gilbert's famous memoir. But now this small village at Bangli, north-east of Ubud, is the final destination for scores of victims dying from suspected COVID-19. As the spread of coronavirus accelerates across Bali, workers at the Bebalang crematorium say they are struggling to keep up with demand. It is one of the few crematoriums on the island designated to deal with the bodies of people who died with confirmed or...…Print contentPrint with images and other mediaPrint text onlyPrintCancelBebalang village is best known to tourists as a stop on Bali's Eat, Pray, Love tour for fans of Elizabeth Gilbert's famous memoir. But now this small village at Bangli, north-east of Ubud, is the final destination for scores of victims dying from suspected COVID-19. As the spread of coronavirus accelerates across Bali, workers at the Bebalang crematorium say they are struggling to keep up with demand. It is one of the few crematoriums on the island designated to deal with the bodies of people who died with confirmed or...WW…

Australian scientists slash dengue fever in Indonesia by infecting mosquitoes with bacteria - ABC News
Print contentPrint with images and other mediaPrint text onlyPrintCancelAustralian scientists may have found the secret to eradicating dengue fever, with a lengthy trial in Indonesia drastically reducing the incidence of the mosquito-borne virus. Researchers at Melbourne's Monash University — working with scientists in Yogyakarta, in Central Java — have spent three years infecting local mosquitoes with a bacteria known to prevent them from transmitting the virus to humans. Known as Wolbachia, the bacteria effectively starves the virus of food.And as the infected mosquitoes breed with the...…Print contentPrint with images and other mediaPrint text onlyPrintCancelAustralian scientists may have found the secret to eradicating dengue fever, with a lengthy trial in Indonesia drastically reducing the incidence of the mosquito-borne virus. Researchers at Melbourne's Monash University — working with scientists in Yogyakarta, in Central Java — have spent three years infecting local mosquitoes with a bacteria known to prevent them from transmitting the virus to humans. Known as Wolbachia, the bacteria effectively starves the virus of food.And as the infected mosquitoes breed with the...WW…
- Total 2 items
- 1
