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Bidwill Medical Centre in Sydney, Australia | Medical and health



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Bidwill Medical Centre

Locality: Sydney, Australia



Address: 595 Luxford Rd 2770 Sydney, NSW, Australia

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24.01.2022 Getting your results Information on how to register for an SMS result is provided when you get tested. Results typically take 24 to 72 hours. Most people in NSW receive their test result within 24 hours.... If you’ve been tested at a public hospital clinic or emergency department, you can also receive your result securely via your MyServiceNSW account, and a push notification, if you also have the Service NSW mobile app. If you haven't received your results, contact the National Coronavirus Health Information Line on 1800 020 080 for advice.



15.01.2022 Getting tested for Covid-19 Infection with COVID-19 is diagnosed by finding the virus in samples of respiratory fluid taken from the back of the nose and/or throat, or from the lungs. The samples are taken at testing clinics, which operate across NSW. You can be tested at:... COVID-19 clinics, set up especially for testing some private pathology sites some GPs.

13.01.2022 How important are Vaccinations ? There has been confusion and misunderstandings about vaccines. But vaccinations are an important part of family and public health. Vaccines prevent the spread of contagious, dangerous, and deadly diseases. These include measles, polio, mumps, chicken pox, whooping cough, diphtheria, and HPV. The first vaccine discovered was the smallpox vaccine. Smallpox was a deadly illness. It killed 300 million to 500 million people around the world in the ...last century. After the vaccine was given to people, the disease was eventually erased. It’s the only disease to be completely destroyed. There are now others close to that point, including polio. What are vaccines? A vaccine (or immunization) is a way to build your body’s natural immunity to a disease before you get sick. This keeps you from getting and spreading the disease. For most vaccines, a weakened form of the disease germ is injected into your body. This is usually done with a shot in the leg or arm. Your body detects the invading germs (antigens) and produces antibodies to fight them. Those antibodies then stay in your body for a long time. In many cases, they stay for the rest of your life. If you’re ever exposed to the disease again, your body will fight it off without you ever getting the disease. Some illnesses, like strains of cold viruses, are fairly mild. But some, like smallpox or polio, can cause life-altering changes. They can even result in death. That’s why preventing your body from contracting these illnesses is very important. How does immunity work? Your body builds a defense system to fight foreign germs that could make you sick or hurt you. It’s called your immune system. To build up your immune system, your body must be exposed to different germs. When your body is exposed to a germ for the first time, it produces antibodies to fight it. But that takes time and you usually get sick before the antibodies have built up. But once you have antibodies, they stay in your body. So the next time you’re exposed to that germ, the antibodies will attack it, and you won’t get sick.

08.01.2022 New Update on Bidwill Medical Centre



01.01.2022 Symptoms of COVID-19 include fever (37.5 or higher) cough sore/scratchy throat... shortness of breath runny nose loss of smell or loss of taste. Other reported symptoms include fatigue muscle pain joint pain headache diarrhoea nausea/vomiting loss of appetite unexplained chest pain conjunctivitis. In more severe cases, infection can cause pneumonia with severe acute respiratory distress. See more

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