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Added on the 05/10/2021 14:00:00 - Copyright : EFE Inglés
Medan, Jun 15 (EFE/EPA).- Indonesia on Tuesday continued the COVID-19 mass testing. Indonesia has so far reported over 1.9 million COVID-19 cases and 53,116 deaths since the beginning of pandemic. (Camera: DEDI SINUHAJI).SHOT LIST: HEALTH AUTHORITIES COLLECT SWAB SAMPLES FROM CITIZENS TO TEST FOR COVID-19 IN MEDAN, INDONESIA.
Medan, Jun 3 (EFE/EPA).- Indonesia on Thursday continued to conduct mass testing for citizens to test for COVID-19.Indonesia has so far recorded over 1.8 million COVID-19 cases and 50,000 deaths since the beginning of pandemic. (Camera: DEDI SINUHAJI).SHOT LIST:HEALTH WORKERS COLLECT SWAB SAMPLES FROM PEOPLE IN THE RESIDENTIAL AREAS IN MEDAN, INDONESIA, TO TEST FOR COVID-19.
Medan, May 24 (EFE/EPA).- People in the Indonesian city of Medan on Monday have their breath samples taken to test for COVID-19, using a breath detector GeNose developed by Indonesian university.GeNose was developed by Gadjah Mada University (UGM) and has a 93 to 95 percent accuracy level, according to the developer. Indonesia has registered more than 1.7 million infections and 49,000 deaths since the beginning of the pandemic. (Camera: DEDI SINUHAJI).SHOT LIST: PEOPLE HAVE THEIR BREATH SAMPLES TAKEN TO TEST FOR COVID-19 AT A TRAIN STATION IN MEDAN, INDONESIA.
Denpasar, Feb 18 (EFE/EPA).- Indonesia continued to collect COVID-19 swab samples from citizens as the second phase of the vaccination campaign began.The Asian country has so far recorded over 1.2 million cases and 33,700 deaths from COVID-19 since the beginning of the pandemic. (Camera: MADE NAGI).SHOT LIST: HEALTH WORKERS COLLECT SWAB SAMPLES FROM PEOPLE IN DENPASAR, BALI, INDONESIA.
Jakarta, Jun 12 (EFE/EPA).-Healthcare workers dispersed into the streets of Jakarta on Friday as Indonesia rolled out mass door-to-door testing for COVID-19.The Indonesian government has imposed a new set of regulations known as 'new normal', which will be implemented in stages, starting in early June for some provinces. Provinces that have either reported no new COVID-19 infections or are reporting a significant drop in infection numbers can reopen businesses while adhering to health code protocols. (Camera: MAST IRHAM).SHOT LIST: HEALTHCARE WORKERS IN HAZMAT SUITS COLLECT THE DATA FROM RESIDENTS DURING A DOOR-TO-DOOR COVID-19 SWAP TEST AT A RESIDENTIAL AREA IN JAKARTA, INDONESIA.