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Parallel World Pharmacy Ep. 10 Reaction [FULL]

this is one of my favorites this season!

Parallel World Pharmacy Ep. 10 Reaction [FULL]

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Also, Farma has the divine eyes to investigate whether people are sick or not. As those villagers are not familiar with his white PPE, it should be a better choice to show his face and communicate after he confirmed no one sick nearby.

chromelok

Oh, interesting!

Kot Bajun

The LN actually explains why Farma dont really need the mask, as he is some sort of "incarnation of medicine godness", he always has an aura that kill the bacteria and viruses closes to him (or at least those things can't live long in such condition). He wears PPE so that everyone also wear it. He can also create a sterile area with this aura ability (just like what he did before the priest's leg surgery).

chromelok

Do bacteria/viruses need oxygen to survive? Or do they just sink to the bottom or what causes them to dilute in such instances?

Skebaba

In the case of sinking ships at sea to prevent the spread of illness, it can be a valid tactic. It can fail if the ship is too close to land, debris can drift to shore and that debris can carry the illness. I seem to recall reading incidents in the real world where this happened, ships being sunk and debris washed ashore carrying rats that survived by clinging to the floating debris. If the ship is far enough to sea, then debris either won't make it to land, or if it does any illness or pests will have succumbed to the elements after floating for so long. Any bacteria and viruses that end up in the water will generally dilute to the point they aren't infectious after a short time. You won't get a concentration high enough drifting to shore to worry about. The salt content of ocean water can also be an issue, the salt in the water can destroy bacterial cell walls if a particular bacteria isn't evolved to survive in those conditions. Yersinia pestis in particular is generally not well adapted to surviving in salty conditions, however there are areas in Africa along the Mediterranean where salt resistant strains have been identified, but they are rarer and considered to be slower reproducing and less of a threat. Bear in mind, I'm no expert and only research illnesses as a hobby, when one catches my interest. There may very well be information I don't know, or have read from incorrect or outdated sources.

vardic d


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