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Feb 11 2022
News
Omicron is fading, but nobody knows when the pandemic will finally end
Senior U.S. health officials have sought to reassure a pandemic-weary public that the country is moving closer to a time when Covid-19 won’t dominate our daily lives, as an unprecedented surge of infections and hospitalizations declines in many parts of the country.
White House chief medical advisor Dr. Anthony Fauci said in an interview this week the U.S. is heading out of the “full-
CNBCSep 07 2022
News
Christian Teacher Thrown in Jail After Refusing to Use Trans Student's 'Preferred Pronouns'
An Irish teacher has, in his words, been place behind bars because he “would not call a boy a girl.”
Enoch Burke, who teaches history, politics, and German at Wilson’s Hospital School was arrested Monday after he violated a court order prohibiting him from teaching classes or even being present on the school’s campus in Westmeath, the Irish news outlet RTE reported.
He is now in
CBNNov 19 2021
News
Dr. Fauci Warns COVID Is Still A Problem For Unvaccinated, Recommends Booster Shot
Dr. Anthony Fauci said this week that COVID-19 hospitalizations are rising for unvaccinated Americans and also recommended that a booster shot for those who are vaccinated.
“What we’re starting to see now is an uptick in hospitalizations among people who’ve been vaccinated but not boosted,” Dr. Fauci, the director of the National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Disease, said in an
International Business TimesJan 11 2022
Analysis
Sotomayor Claims 100,000 Children ‘in Serious Condition,’ on ‘Ventilators’
CLAIM: U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor: “We have over 100,000 children, which we’ve never had before, in serious condition, many on ventilators,” from coronavirus.
VERDICT: FALSE. There are about 4,000 children in hospital from coronavirus.
Justice Sotomayor made several factually false statements during oral arguments Friday at the Supreme Court, as the justices
Breitbart Fact CheckSep 05 2022
News
Doctors get educated in an effort to curb opioid overdoses
Reining in opioid prescriptions is one strategy governments and medical providers have deployed to curb the overdose epidemic driven by opioids. A group of researchers found a even brief teaching video was enough to make a noticeable difference in prescription habits.
Pankti Acharya, a medical student at Rowan University School of Osteopathic Medicine, worked with a team of researchers
NewsNationOct 03 2021
News
A healthcare worker who was just fired for refusing the COVID-19 shot says she wouldn't get it even if God said 'you must take this vaccine'
Karen Roses of Riverhead, New York was fired from a Northwell Health hospital for refusing to take the coronavirus vaccine.
New York's COVID-19 vaccination mandate went into effect on September 27, requiring hospital and nursing home healthcare workers to have received their first dose.
Roses is one of a fraction of healthcare employees who would rather be terminated than get the
Business InsiderFeb 23 2023
Perspectives Blog
What Biden's Surprise Ukraine Visit Means for the War
President Joe Biden made a surprise visit to the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv on Monday, meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and pledging to continue military aid.
The Details: In his first visit to Ukraine since the war began a year ago, Biden visited the presidential palace and walked the streets of Kyiv alongside Zelenskyy. He also announced roughly $500 million of
AllSides StaffApr 25 2022
News
COVID pill to be widely available soon, White House says
The Biden administration is preparing to announce plans this week to make Pfizer's COVID-19 pill available at almost any pharmacy in the U.S. after early shortages.
Why it matters: The drug, Paxlovid, was called a potential "game-changer" for its ability to treat infections at home and keep individuals at risk of severe illness out of the hospital.
But availability has been
AxiosMay 05 2022
News
Nearly 15 million deaths related to covid-19, WHO estimates
The coronavirus pandemic led to nearly 15 million excess deaths worldwide, according to a new estimate by the World Health Organization, including people who died from covid-19 and others who died from other causes related to the crisis, such as health care shortages as the virus surged and overwhelmed hospitals.
The WHO defines excess deaths as “the difference between the number of
Washington PostSep 02 2022
News
Payrolls rose 315,000 in August as companies keep up hiring pace
Nonfarm payrolls rose solidly in August amid an otherwise slowing economy, while the unemployment rate ticked higher as more workers rejoined the labor force, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Friday.
The economy added 315,000 jobs for the month, just below the Dow Jones estimate for 318,000. The unemployment rate rose to 3.7%, two-tenths of a percentage point higher than
CNBC