Rubella Model

Caption: The rubella virus is a cycle of human-to-human transmission each outbreak. It is a single-strand RNA virus with a serotype that does not react with other togaviruses. Outbreaks of rubella occur around every 5-9 years globally, and has a transmission rate of 10-30%. When someone is infected, they experience symptoms including chills, fever, uncontrollable sneezing and coughing, and rashes. The virus causes the infected person to cough, allowing the virus to enter the air and the respiratory tract of someone who is not infected. The rubella virus enters the cells membrane, self-replicates and causes the newly infected person to experience the same symptoms. However, if the infected person stays in isolation, takes medication to alleviate the symptoms and the MMR (measles, mumps and rubella) or MMRV (measles, mumps, rubella, and varicella) vaccine for immunization and to prevent another outbreak, the cycle of infection will eventually end since only humans can spread the disease.

Engine speed5
Loading...
0%

Loading...