Showing posts with label sick days. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sick days. Show all posts

Eat ice cream for breakfast day - February 18

 

Eat ice cream for breakfast day

"Life is short, eat dessert first"

~ Jacques Torres

This phrase was coined by a French confectioner and his message is that life is short and unpredictable so you have to enjoy them first. Eat ice cream for breakfast day is a serious example of the use of this phrase. This day was created to raise awareness of cancer among children. For children for whom every day is a blessing, it only makes sense to indulge in the little pleasures of life, and a day of eating ice cream for breakfast brings this opportunity to everyone.



The history of Eat ice cream for breakfast day

Eat ice cream for breakfast day was created to commemorate the wonderful 9 years of the girl Malia Grace Patterson, who was born on February 18, 2001 in Minnesota, USA, and passed away after a long battle with cancer on December 7, 2010. Malia Grace has inspired many people, an example of life enthusiasm And from the good little things they offer. She learned and gained knowledge every day, went out as much as possible and with the help of her passion became every day an adventure in her short life. She lived her life with a smile and passed away in her sleep. In 9 years she touched countless people with energy, humor, laughter And hugs.

Breakfast Day for Breakfast was first celebrated by a group of close friends to commemorate her life and work, by eating ice cream for breakfast, and in the following years continued to spread this day and its meaning in honor of all children with cancer.



How to celebrate Eat ice cream for breakfast day?

Eat ice cream for breakfast day is recommended to be marked by eating ice cream as your first meal in the morning. To spread the message and give this day meaning, you need to upload a picture of yourself eating ice cream for breakfast to the social network you are active in, tell why you eat ice cream for breakfast and add the hashtag #icecreambreakfast.



If you are not interested in eating ice cream at your breakfast but do want to advance the cause of this day, you can donate to local hospitals and health centers that help parents and children fight the disease and always need donations.

You can also contact the pediatric oncology department at the hospital near you and find out what kind of volunteer help they need.

Eat ice cream for breakfast Facebook page 

February 18 is also Pluto DayDrink Wine Day and Battery Day

World Rabies Day - September 28

World Rabies Day is an international campaign aimed at raising awareness of the impact of rabies on humans and animals, providing information and advice on how to prevent the disease, and how individuals and organizations can help eliminate the major global sources of disease outbreak.
The Initiator of Rabies Day is the World Alliance for the Control of Rabies, a non-profit organization headquartered in the United States and the United Kingdom.
World Rabies Day is held every year on September 28, the anniversary of the death of Louis Pasteur, the man who developed the first effective rabies vaccine.


Some facts about rabies:

Rabies is also called hydrophobia after one of its symptoms - extreme fear of water. Hydrophobia occurs in humans infected with rabies, not in animals.



Rabies is considered the most deadly disease in the world, as most people infected with it do not survive.

Rabies infects not only dogs and animals in the canine family, but also other mammals, including humans.

The cause of rabies is a virus that is most often transmitted by the bite of an infected animal. The virus passes through the saliva and can also pass through licking.

Rabies is a deadly viral disease that attacks the nervous system of mammals.

The rabies virus passes through the body through nerve fibers to the brain. As long as the virus does not reach the brain, the animal it is in is called a carrier.

The animals that may be infected with the rabies virus are mainly jackals, wolves, foxes, rats, raccoons and bats and any living creature with warm blood.


Infected animals can act as vectors that transmit the virus, and also infect humans that come in contact with them.

The time that elapses from the onset of the disease to its onset ranges from a few weeks to a year, and is affected by many factors such as: the size of the bite, the number of bites, proximity to the spine and proximity to the head.

The symptoms of rabies: Behavioral change is the first sign. For example, a friendly dog will become aggressive. As the disease progresses, the virus passes through the facial nerves and reaches the salivary glands. At this point the patient begins to become contagious through the saliva. The virus then descends to the swallowing muscles, then there is impaired swallowing ability, and increased salivation. Another symptom is photophobia, hypersensitivity to light and fear (while) or aversion to sunlight and well-lit places. The next stage is development throughout the body, to the point of paralysis of the respiratory muscles and death.



After the first signs appear, the chances of recovering from rabies are nil. If there is a suspicion that a person has contracted rabies, he should be vaccinated immediately to save him.

Only six people are known to have survived rabies after it broke out. Five of them were vaccinated against rabies before the disease broke out and yet the symptoms appeared in them. Only one girl survived rabies without any vaccine. In 2004, Jeanna Giese, a 16-year-old girl from Wisconsin, USA, was bitten on the finger by a rat. She did not seek treatment and after 37 days she developed symptoms of the disease. Her immune system began to develop antibodies on her own that would fight the virus.She survived the disease but her motor ability was severely impaired.After undergoing rehabilitative treatments she was able to walk and drive.

Every year between 40,000 and 70,000 people die from rabies worldwide. About 6 million people worldwide receive the vaccine each year for fear of being infected.

World Cancer Survivors Day - The first Sunday in June

Every first Sunday in June, cancer survivors celebrate life.
This special day is celebrated at various events around the world and is designed to celebrate with those who have managed to defeat cancer, encourage those who have been diagnosed and those who fight it, raise funds for cancer research and cure, support cancer patients and their families and more.


If you want to celebrate World Cancer Survivors Day, you can register or organize events on the site: National Cancer Survivors Day
When does Cancer Survivors Day come out in the coming years:
2021- June 6
2022- June 5th
2023- June 4th
World Cancer Survivors Day


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