Friday, October 10, 2014

Ebola

Hot news decide. In this entry we´ll show recent information, graphics, pictures that we though were interesting. Both, printed and online media. From Spanish and foreign media.

The first thing that is worth to present is the effort made by Spanish media to explain things through infographics. Lets see some examples from El CorreoEl MundoABCLa Vanguardia and El Pais.






These days we´ve also seen a fantastic picture from Samuel Aranda in the front-page of the New York Times; and, maybe, the cartoon —from André Carrilho— that best shows what´s happening:



In addition, we´ve found excellent pieces of information in digital media. This is a selection of 27 worth knowing:

How´s the garment, interactive graphic from El Confidencial.

Explaining the garment video from the Wall Sreet Journal.

Questions and answers in El País.

In Ebola´s zero zone. Series from Alberto Rojas in El Mundo.

Ebola and the human body. Excellent infographic in The Washington Post.

Series of graphics in Wall Street Journal.

Vídeo that explains the ebola in Le Monde.

Ebola in Nigeria in The Guardian.

Ebola orphans in BBCNews.

Crisis caused by Ebola in The Independent.

An experimental drug in The Washington Post.

Why NGO´s get infected less in El Mundo.

A trip to the hospital where the Spanish missioner worked in El Confidencial.

A virus in numbers in 20minutos.

Graphics in El Periódico.

To understand the virus´ dimension , in BBCMundo.

The outbreak. Graphic in The National Post.

Heavy technological artillery againts the Ebola in esglobal.

John Moore, the photographer that photographs the victims in Clases de Periodismo.

Patients treated outside Occidental Africa in New York Times.

The Ebola outbreaks  in South China Morning Post.

To know more, the WHO

Numbers about the treatment in the Wall Street Journal.

Photography. Wrapped in plastic. That´s how various countries get prepared. In The Atlantic.

How it spreads, compared with other illnesses, in The Washington Post.

My friend at the other side of the fence, in El País.

Living with ebola in West Africa in The Boston Globe.

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