The following article is a sample of the web content that we write for our clients. We Do Web Content specializes in SEO services, such as: search engine placement (via SEO web copy), Internet marketing, website promotion, public relations, and blogs.
Our pricing is 25%, on average, less than the competition and our bloggers are "2nd to none"!
DISCLAIMER: Please note that every case is different and these verdicts and settlements, while accurate, do not represent what we may obtain for you in your case.
As summer winds down in the Northern Hemisphere, healthcare organizations and health workers around the world are preparing for the upcoming 2009 flu season.
With this spring's emergence of the swine flu and the continued growth of this particular strain of influenza, healthcare officials - such as the World Health Organization (WHO) - have urged special diligence in preparing for a swine flu pandemic.
What is swine flu?
Swine flu, or novel H1N1, is a strain of influenza that is transmitted via person-to-person contact and causes mild to severe symptoms that are similar to those of the standard seasonal influenza.
Here are some swine flu symptoms:
Though the name suggests the virus is endemic to pigs, swine flu is actually the result of four different influenza strains - one human variant, two pig (swine) strains and one bird (avian) strain - merging and mutating into one new strain. Swine flu is the early moniker given to the illness, and is not currently used by health officials to describe the virus.
The First 2009 Swine Flu Pandemic
Though it is unknown when the virus actually appeared, H1N1 was officially identified in April 2009 when the first widespread swine flu outbreak was reported in Mexico. The virus quickly appeared in patients outside of Mexico, and the WHO declared a global pandemic in early June 2009.
Officials in Mexico reacted to the outbreak by effectively closing down Mexico City, including private and public offices, restaurants and spaces. Though no borders were closed as a result of the outbreak, travel to Mexico decreased significantly as people sought to avoid "ground zero" for swine flu. Travelers in some countries were placed in quarantine after returning home from countries with reported outbreaks.
Concern increased as the virus spread across the U.S. - it has been reported in all 50 states - and the world, and deaths were attributed to swine flu.
In the United States, some grade schools and colleges and universities cancelled classes at the report of an H1N1 infected student and employers were urged to send home any workers that exhibited signs of the illness.
Continue to Next Page >>

We Do Web Content
7067 West Broward Blvd.
Suite D
Plantation, FL 33317
Toll Free: 888-521-3880
Get Directions
We Do Web Content
Toll Free: (888) 521-3880
Copyright Disclaimer