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After dodging COVID-19 several times during the pandemic, flight attendant Angeliki Kaoukaki wondered if she was a medical anomaly. But she’s possibly among a small group of people who might ...
Patricia Lockwood’s new novel reflects on the Covid-19 pandemic and the effect it had on her writing. "Someone from my lovely ...
More vaccinated people die of COVID-19 in terms of raw numbers, but only because so many are vaccinated. Unvaccinated still die at a higher rate. Hotspots ranked Start the day smarter ☀️ ...
Cases of the new COVID-19 variant NB.1.8.1, a descendent of the Omicron variant, are on the rise in some parts of the world, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).. Currently, there are ...
The US Department of Health and Human Services, under Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., has recently made significant changes to how Covid-19 vaccines are approved and the groups they are ...
February 11, 2020- The disease officially named Covid-19. March 11, 2020 – WHO declares Covid-19 a global pandemic. March 12, 2020 – India reports its first Covid-19 death (a 76-year-old man ...
Welcome to another summer of Covid-19 infections. Here’s what to do to reduce your risk of catching the disease and what to do if you get it.
COVID-19 no longer poses the urgent public-health threat it once did.But recent research points to a good reason to keep the virus in mind: it could leave a lasting stamp on yours. Studies suggest ...
The government's free at-home COVID-19 test distribution program is no longer accepting orders, its website says. Here's how to get tests in the meantime.
A new, highly infectious COVID-19 strain that has been running rampant in China has now been detected in the US, including cases in New York City, according to the Centers for Disease Control and ...
A total of 463,267 COVID-19 deaths were recorded in 2021, which was the deadliest year for the virus in the U.S. Confirmed deaths have been falling since, plunging from 246,272 in 2022 to 76,042 ...
A small majority (56%) says COVID-19 isn’t something we need to worry about much. Still, about four-in-ten (39%) say we’re not taking it seriously enough. When it comes to testing for COVID-19, nearly ...