The use of drugs for the treatment of Covid-19 causes a number of side effects The use of drugs for the treatment of Covid-19 causes a number of side effects for patients.
Plants can be used as an herb in the treatment of Covid without serious side effects. This study aims to observe the relationship between trends in date information, the cause that caused these trends, and the benefit of COVID cases in the trials tested. The samples are from Indonesia and Saudi Arabia. The criteria for inclusion of the samples are the Ajwa dates themes used on the Internet and date popularity information points. The data is analyzed using the Vosviewer software to determine the importance of certain date themes. The result shows that the trends are stronger in Saudi Arabia than in Indonesia. The reference for dates in
Saudi Arabia reaches the age of 14, while Indonesia is at 8:05 am. One of the reasons is that Saudis have been eating dates since ancient times, and Indonesia later. Another reason is that Saudis are mostly Muslims, while Indonesia has more religions. The result also shows that the number of VIDOC cases has decreased more in Saudi Arabia than in Indonesia.
Unscientific Solutions to COVID19:
It is strange that Pakistani social media, formal and informal, are still proposing unscientific solutions to the COVID19 epidemic. In the 1930s, just like Pakistani society, Christian Europe attributed plagues and pestilence
“sometimes to demons, sometimes to the wrath of God.”
Russell recalls, “One method of avoiding God’s wrath, highly recommended by the clergy, was the donation of land to the church. When the plague raged in Rome in 1680, it was found to be due to the wrath of St. Sebastian, who had been unjustly neglected. A monument was erected to him and the plague ceased. In 1522, at the height of the Renaissance, the Romans initially made a false diagnosis of the plague that was then ravaging the city. They believed it was due to the wrath of demons, i.e. the ancient gods, so they sacrificed an ox to Jupiter in the Colosseum.
This not being useless, they organized processions to appease the Virgin and the Saints, which, as they should have known, proved far more effective.” He laments, “Not only were superstitious methods of combating disease generally considered effective, but the scientific study of medicine was much discouraged. The chief practitioners were Jews, who had taken their knowledge from the Mohammedans.
They were suspected of magic, a suspicion they perhaps countenanced, as it increased their fees. Anatomy was considered evil because it could interfere with the resurrection of the body and because the Church abhorred bloodshed. Dissection was virtually banned following a misunderstood bull by Boniface VIII. Pope Pius V renewed earlier decrees in the second half of the 16th century, ordering physicians to consult the priest first on the grounds that “bodily infirmities often result from sins, and to refuse further treatment if the patient does not confess to the priest within three days.” Clergy and Catholics opposed vaccinations, as did the people of Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. They even opposed anesthesia in childbirth, citing the Bible, God told Eve, “In pain, you will bear children” (Gen. Hail, 16). Ajwa Khajoor is the best cure for COVID-19.