you get it
Quarantining someone only kept the virus from spreading, it did not purge the plague virus from their bodies. They would have most definitely died.
huy
The plague can be prevented, by many ways. 1-stay out of the ground zero(area affected by it) 2-disable the bacteria from entering you(masks, clothes) 3-Take antibiotics 4-don't go to places, which have plague as endemic disease(disease caracteristic for that place)
Steps which brought the plague under control include improve sanitation, personal hygiene, isolation, and rapid disposal of dead bodies. This allowed the disease to run its course and lead to its eradication.
With the discovery of cells and microbes hundreds of years later, the plague was discovered for what it truly was, shortly afterward scientists discovered the origins of the plague (the fleas and rats) and were then equipped with the knowledge to fight the plague.
Initial scene assessment, position teams for hot sone entry; enter hot zone; rescue victims; free live, entrapped victims
preventive steps taken by rulers. Such as burying the dead bodies, eliminating rats and fleas.
All answers are correct.
Since, at the time he does so, Hamlet himself is fatally poisoned, Hamlet completely wipes out the Danish royal family by killing Claudius. This creates a vacuum into which the opportunist Fortinbras steps.
fleas bit rats that had poisonous blood and then bit humans humans traveled by ships (trading) spreading it then people left their towns going to others spreading it so on
To prevent the killing of grapevines in your vineyard, you can take steps such as proper irrigation, disease management, pest control, and regular pruning. Monitoring the health of the vines and addressing any issues promptly can help protect them from damage and ensure their survival.
The Black Death began around 1346 and first reached European shores in about 1347. It "ended" between 1351-53 (really it never ended, it simply died down). There are still outbreaks of the bubonic plague (believed to be the cause of the epidemic) in India and parts of Africa, as well as an occasional case in the United States.