Diapositives de présentation Powerpoint sur la maladie à virus corona 19

Rating:
80%
Slide 1 of 61
Favourites Favourites

Try Before you Buy Download Free Sample Product

Audience Impress Your
Audience
Editable 100%
Editable
Time Save Hours
of Time
The Biggest Sale is ending soon in
0
0
:
0
0
:
0
0
Rating:
80%

Caractéristiques de ces diapositives de présentation PowerPoint :

Présentation des diapositives de présentation PowerPoint sur la maladie à virus Corona 19. Il s'agit d'un jeu complet contenant 61 diapositives PPT entièrement modifiables. Vous pouvez personnaliser la police, le texte, l'arrière-plan, les couleurs et les motifs selon votre convenance. Ce diaporama PowerPoint prend également en charge deux résolutions d'écran, standard et grand écran. Il est également très simple de convertir le format PPT en JPG, PDF ou PNG. Il est compatible avec Google Slides.

People who downloaded this PowerPoint presentation also viewed the following :

Contenu de cette présentation Powerpoint


Diapositive 1 : Cette diapositive présente la maladie à virus Corona 19. Indiquez le nom de votre entreprise et commencez.
Diapositive 2 : Cette diapositive présente la chronologie du coronavirus avec la période d'incubation. Les patients COVID 19 présentent des symptômes bénins avec une période d'incubation de 2 à 14 jours
Diapositive 3 : Cette diapositive représente les symptômes de la maladie à coronavirus 19 allant de légers graves à critiques
Diapositive 4 : Cette diapositive montre la maladie à coronavirus 19 avec ses symptômes et ses méthodes de prévention.
Diapositive 5 : Cette diapositive comprend le facteur de risque lié à l'âge de la maladie à coronavirus 19.
Diapositive 6 : Cette diapositive affiche la maladie à coronavirus 19 avec les symptômes et les méthodes de prévention.
Diapositive 7 : Cette diapositive montre la contagiosité du COVID 19 par rapport à d'autres pandémies
Diapositive 8 : Cette diapositive illustre le MERS - COV montrant le taux de mortalité et les cas guéris.
Diapositive 9 : Cette diapositive présente le taux d'incubation de coronavirus par rapport à d'autres pandémies mondiales.
Diapositive 10 : Cette diapositive affiche le GRAPHIQUE montrant la différence dans le taux de mortalité COVID 19 après avoir pris une mesure de protection
Diapositive 11 : Cette diapositive présente les symptômes et la prévention du nouveau coronavirus.
Diapositive 12 : Cette diapositive décrit la transmission et le facteur de risque du coronavirus nCOV.
Diapositive 13 : Cette diapositive montre le masque de protection respiratoire COVID 19.
Diapositive 14 : Cette diapositive présente le taux de mortalité du nouveau COVID 19 et l'épicentre mondial.
Diapositive 15 : Cette diapositive présente la nouvelle maladie à coronavirus avec les pays touchés et les symptômes.
Diapositive 16 : Cette diapositive affiche un graphique indiquant le nombre de jours que le coronavirus peut durer sur plusieurs surfaces.
Diapositive 17 : Cette diapositive décrit les statistiques mondiales clés sur le coronavirus et la période d'incubation.
Diapositive 18 : Cette diapositive montre la durée de vie du coronavirus sur différentes surfaces.
Diapositive 19 : Cette diapositive représente la période d'incubation du coronavirus avec la période d'incubation et le nCov.
Diapositive 20 : Cette diapositive présente les symptômes du coronavirus chez l'homme qui tousse.
Diapositive 21 : Cette diapositive présente la carte du monde montrant l'épidémie de coronavirus par continent.
Diapositive 22 : Cette diapositive représente la maladie à coronavirus 19 avec risque de transmission et de prévention.
Diapositive 23 : Cette diapositive présente les statistiques mondiales de COVID 19 avec la Chine comme épicentre.
Diapositive 24 : Cette diapositive illustre l'infographie sur le coronavirus montrant les symptômes et les cas mondiaux.
Diapositive 25 : Cette diapositive présente les statistiques mondiales sur les nouveaux coronavirus montrant les cas actifs
Diapositive 26 : Cette diapositive montre la transmission humaine de la nouvelle maladie à coronavirus 19.
Diapositive 27 : Cette diapositive illustre le tableau de bord des statistiques mondiales sur les coronavirus montrant l'impact.
Diapositive 28 : Cette diapositive met en évidence le tableau de bord mondial du coronavirus montrant les personnes infectées et récupérées.
Diapositive 29 : Cette diapositive affiche un graphique montrant l'impact du coronavirus sur le marché boursier.
Diapositive 30 : Cette diapositive présente l'origine du nouveau coronavirus d'origine animale
Diapositive 31 : Cette diapositive montre l'infographie de la maladie à coronavirus 19 montrant la période de prévention et d'incubation.
Diapositive 32 : Cette diapositive montre les méthodes de prévention du coronavirus montrant le lavage des mains et la distanciation sociale
Diapositive 33 : Cette diapositive décrit les statistiques clés indiquant les cas et les causes dans le monde
Diapositive 34 : Cette diapositive présente la propagation et la prévention du nouveau coronavirus COVID 19.
Diapositive 35 : Cette diapositive présente les méthodes de prévention du coronavirus montrant le port du masque et le lavage des mains.
Diapositive 36 : Cette diapositive présente les complications et les symptômes du nouveau coronavirus COVID 19
Diapositive 37 : Cette diapositive présente les symptômes de prévention du coronavirus montrant la distanciation sociale et le désinfectant pour les mains.
Diapositive 38 : Cette diapositive montre la période d'incubation et les symptômes de COVID 19.
Diapositive 39 : Cette diapositive illustre la maladie à coronavirus 19 montrant le risque de transmission.
Diapositive 40 : Cette diapositive montre les poumons infectés et les symptômes de COVID 19
Diapositive 41 : Cette diapositive présente l'infographie COVID 19 montrant les porteurs de virus
Diapositive 42 : Ce modèle met en évidence le coronavirus de Wuhan 2019 montrant les statistiques et les symptômes mondiaux
Diapositive 43 : Cette diapositive illustre la maladie à coronavirus de Wuhan 19 avec transmission et symptômes.
Diapositive 44 : Cette diapositive montre la maladie à coronavirus 2019 montrant les décès dans le monde.
Diapositive 45 : Cette diapositive montre la fièvre, la toux et les douleurs thoraciques comme symptômes de COVID 19
Diapositive 46 : Cette diapositive présente la contagion et la prévention de la maladie à coronavirus 2019.
Diapositive 47 : Cette diapositive présente le Coronavirus 2019 avec vaccination et douleur thoracique.
Diapositive 48 : Cette diapositive montre le diagramme d'étiquettes du nouveau coronavirus de Wuhan.
Diapositive 49 : Cette diapositive montre l'icône du roman COVID 19 affichant le virus et le panneau d'arrêt.
Diapositive 50 : Cette diapositive représente la maladie à coronavirus 19 montrant un homme en quarantaine.
Diapositive 51 : Cette diapositive met en évidence le timbre suspecté de coronavirus sur le passeport.
Diapositive 52 : Ceci est la diapositive d'icônes pour la maladie à virus Corona 19.
Diapositive 53 : Cette diapositive est intitulée Diapositives supplémentaires pour aller de l'avant.
Diapositive 54 : Cette diapositive affiche l'ordre du jour.
Diapositive 55 : Cette diapositive s'intitule Post it Notes. Postez vos notes importantes ici.
Diapositive 56 : Cette diapositive affiche un graphique à barres groupé avec une comparaison de différents produits.
Diapositive 57 : Cette diapositive montre le processus de la chronologie.
Diapositive 58 : Ceci est la diapositive Notre objectif.
Diapositive 59 : C'est la diapositive de Venn.
Diapositive 60 : Ceci est une diapositive de génération d'idées pour présenter des idées et des faits importants.
Diapositive 61 : Ceci est la diapositive de remerciement.

FAQs for Corona virus disease 19

Honestly, just stick to the basics - mask up, keep some space between you and other people, wash your hands like crazy. Outdoor stuff is way safer than being packed inside somewhere with bad air. I still catch myself touching my face all the time even though I know better, but seriously try not to since your hands pick up everything. Stay home if you feel off at all, even if it's probably nothing. The trick is doing all of it together rather than just one thing. It's like... your whole setup working together, you know?

Dude, the pandemic really messed with people's heads in different ways. Teens and young adults got hit worst - anxiety and depression went through the roof when they couldn't socialize normally. Women dealt with way more stress than men, probably from handling kids AND work from home (nightmare combo). Honestly, older folks handled it better than anyone expected, except for the ones stuck in nursing homes - that was rough. Essential workers? They're still dealing with trauma from being exposed constantly. Just keep tabs on your team because this stuff is still affecting people in weird ways you might not notice.

Yeah, vaccines are definitely still worth it. They're crushing it when it comes to keeping people out of the hospital and preventing deaths. Sure, variants like Omicron can sneak past some of the protection - you might still get sick even if you're vaxxed. But here's what matters: you're way less likely to end up seriously ill or worse. I'd keep up with boosters though, since your immunity fades over time. The newer shots target recent variants better too. My sister just got her updated one last week actually.

Look, businesses crushing it right now got weird with their approach. Don't just go digital - figure out what you actually do for people and find new ways to do it. Restaurants started selling groceries, gyms rent out equipment now. Pretty genius honestly. Map out what's screwing you over the most restriction-wise, then get your team together to brainstorm. Curbside, virtual meetings, whatever works. The ones winning are staying flexible while keeping everyone safe. Sometimes the craziest ideas end up working.

Honestly, COVID broke everything and we're still picking up the pieces. Supply chains got completely wrecked - turns out just-in-time manufacturing is pretty useless when factories shut down overnight. Companies are now scrambling to find backup suppliers and bring production closer to home. Way more expensive, but at least stuff actually shows up. Inflation's been brutal since demand came roaring back faster than anyone could make things. Labor shortages everywhere too - my friend can't even find decent warehouse workers. Bottom line for your business? You'll need bigger safety nets and higher budgets. The old "fast and cheap" playbook is toast.

Dude, COVID totally changed everything with telehealth. Like, we went from barely using it to everyone doing virtual doctor visits overnight. Insurance companies had to start covering it properly, and all those annoying regulations got dropped real quick. Now people actually expect it - my mom loves not driving to the doctor for simple stuff. Going forward, I think we'll see this weird hybrid thing where mental health appointments and follow-ups stay online, but you'll still need to go in for actual procedures. Honestly, it makes sense. Just heads up though - this is definitely sticking around, so worth thinking about how it impacts your job.

So COVID basically taught hospitals they can't just order supplies last-minute anymore - everyone was fighting over the same masks and ventilators. Cross-training staff became huge because normal job roles fell apart fast. Honestly, the facilities that shared resources and communicated well during transfers did way better. Data systems that actually work together? Game changer during emergencies. Oh, and flexible staffing models - you'll need people who can jump between departments. My advice? Audit your emergency plans now instead of scrambling later. The gaps always show up at the worst possible time.

Honestly, it spreads because social media algorithms love drama - emotional stuff gets shared way more than boring science papers. Plus people trust their friends and family, so when your aunt posts that sketchy article, she probably got it from someone she trusts. I'd just gently fact-check people without being annoying about it, share legit sources from actual health experts, and report the really bad stuff when you spot it. Oh and definitely double-check anything before you share it yourself. Even things that look official can be total BS sometimes.

Ugh, COVID absolutely wrecked education. Like, 1.6 billion kids were out of school at one point - crazy numbers. Most schools scrambled to go online but weren't ready at all. Math and reading scores tanked everywhere, and poor kids got screwed over the worst since they didn't have laptops or decent internet. Colleges struggled too with fewer students enrolling. The one good thing? Schools finally caught up with technology - probably jumped ahead like 5 years in a few months. If you're dealing with education stuff now, hybrid models are huge. Oh, and fixing that digital gap between rich and poor districts.

Marginalized communities got absolutely hammered by COVID because of how everything stacked against them. Most people in these areas work essential jobs - can't exactly deliver groceries from your couch, right? Then you've got overcrowded housing where isolating is basically impossible. Healthcare access was already sketchy before the pandemic hit. Food deserts and environmental crap mean higher rates of diabetes and heart problems too. The numbers are pretty stark - Black and Latino communities had hospitalization rates 2-3x higher than white communities. If you're working on COVID stuff, actually reach these folks instead of the same old demographics.

So COVID tracking got crazy advanced pretty fast. Apps on your phone can literally tell who you've been around using Bluetooth - honestly still feels weird to me. Public health people use these dashboards now to spot outbreaks and figure out where to send resources. The data collection happens way faster than before, and they can actually predict where cases might pop up next based on how people move around. Oh, and if you're doing any health planning stuff, automating that data collection will save you tons of time. It's wild how much your phone knows about your daily life.

Honestly, it's such a tough call - do you help the most vulnerable first or focus on stopping spread? Most places went with healthcare workers, then elderly and high-risk people. But then you've got all these racial and economic inequalities making everything messier. Utilitarians wanted maximum benefit for everyone, while equity people (rightfully) pushed to fix historic healthcare gaps. Here's what I think matters most: whatever plan you pick needs to be crystal clear and transparent. People have to trust it, or they'll revolt no matter how ethical your reasoning actually is.

So the pandemic threw everyone into remote work basically overnight. Some people are killing it - no commute, fewer random interruptions, way better balance. Others? Total disaster without the office structure and actual face time with coworkers. Companies had to figure out completely new ways to track performance and keep everyone connected (which was... interesting to watch). Most places finally get that remote work can actually stick around long-term though. If you're dealing with remote teams, just focus on clear communication and what people actually get done, not how many hours they're online.

Honestly, after watching how badly COVID went, I think there are a few things governments really need to nail down. Early warning systems are huge - you need real-time tracking of what's spreading where. Stockpiling medical stuff beforehand is obvious but so many places didn't do it. Clear communication matters too, though politicians always seem to mess that part up. International coordination would've saved us so much chaos - countries were literally fighting over supplies. And yeah, healthcare systems need to be built tough enough to handle surges. The main thing? You can't wait until you're already drowning to figure this out.

Oh totally, culture made a huge difference in COVID responses. Look at East Asia - they were already used to masks and thinking collectively, so compliance was way easier. Meanwhile Western countries? Way more pushback because individualism runs deep there. Trust in government mattered tons too. Some places just followed orders while others fought every restriction. Even weird stuff like how much personal space people normally want affected whether social distancing actually worked. Honestly the whole thing was like a massive cultural experiment none of us signed up for. You really can't judge policies without considering what each society values first.

Ratings and Reviews

80% of 100
Review Form
Write a review
Most Relevant Reviews
  1. 80%

    by Dan Marshall

    Top Quality presentations that are easily editable.

1 Item

per page: