Covid-19

Chicago teachers face work stoppage in COVID-19 safety plan dispute

By Brendan O'Brien CHICAGO (Reuters) - Chicago teachers appeared headed on Monday for a strike or lockout over their latest dispute with the third-largest U.S. school district after the two sides failed to reach an deal on a COVID-19 safety plan even as they vowed to keep talking. The Chicago Public Schools late on Sunday told the parents of 67,000 pre-kindergarten, special education, elementary and middle school students who were scheduled to attend in-person classes on Monday to keep their children at home after it could not reach an agreement with the Chicago Teachers Union. The district, i...

'Glass houses': Donald Trump Jr. gets crushed after smearing Lincoln Project as 'grifters' and 'pedophiles'

Donald Trump Jr. faced backlash on Twitter on Sunday after he accused members of the Lincoln Project of being grifters and pedophiles.

In a series of tweets, the former president's son took aim at the Lincoln Project, which was founded by former Republicans who worked against his father's reelection.

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Vaccinated Democratic congressman tests positive for COVID-19

Rep. Stephen Lynch (D-Mass.) is the latest lawmaker to test positive for coronavirus.

According to CNN, Lynch had already received the second dose of the Pfizer vaccine prior to President Joe Biden's inaugural ceremony on Wednesday, Jan. 20. At the time, Lynch also tested negative.

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How older people looking for COVID-19 vaccines struggle with and conquer a digital divide

MIAMI — Win the lottery or nail an appointment for a COVID-19 vaccine dose? For thousands of seniors, their friends and family members and caregivers, getting a shot might feel like winning the lottery. That’s how valuable — and seemingly hard to get — that appointment is given how demand far outstrips supply. And it’s also telling how technology tools are not always accessible to every member of a community. In a world where many seniors don’t have computers or computer skills, asking an older population to constantly check websites, navigate links, monitor Twitter alerts as appointments open...

Anti-vax protesters shut down Dodger Stadium vaccine site -- LAPD responds 'in force': report

The vaccination site at Dodger Stadium administered 7,30 COVID-19 vaccine shots on Friday, but was briefly shut down on Saturday by anti-vax protesters.

Mikel Jollett, the frontman for the band Airborne Toxic Event and NYT bestselling author for his memoir, documented the scene on Twitter.

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Fresh data show toll South African virus variant takes on vaccine efficacy

By Julie Steenhuysen CHICAGO (Reuters) - Clinical trial data on two COVID-19 vaccines show that a coronavirus variant first identified in South Africa is lessening their ability to protect against the illness, underscoring the need to vaccinate vast numbers of people as quickly as possible, scientists said. The vaccines from Novavax Inc and Johnson & Johnson were welcomed as important future weapons in curbing deaths and hospitalizations in a pandemic that has infected more than 101 million people and claimed over 2 million lives worldwide. But they were significantly less effective at prevent...

Better behavior, fledgling population immunity behind US case decline

The trend line is now unmistakable: the US Covid outbreak is easing, with new cases and hospitalizations down two weeks in a row, even though the overall numbers still remain far higher than prior to the fall-winter surge.

What's behind the slide? Experts say there are many reasons, from a better adherence to masking and distancing measures, to the fact that the holiday period is now well behind us.

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US workplace safety agency issues new COVID-19 guidance for employers

By Daniel Wiessner (Reuters) - The U.S. Department of Labor office that enforces workplace safety laws on Friday encouraged employers to take additional steps to protect workers amid the COVID-19 pandemic, after unions and Democrats criticized the agency's response under former President Donald Trump. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) issued non-binding guidance recommending that businesses conduct hazard assessments, adopt policies that do not punish employees who miss work because they may be infected, and ensure that safety measures are communicated to non-English spe...

CDC orders sweeping U.S. transportation mask mandate as COVID-19 rages

By David Shepardson WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) issued a sweeping order late Friday requiring the use of face masks on nearly all forms of public transportation Monday as the country continues to report thousands of daily COVID-19 deaths. The order, which takes effect at 11:59 p.m. EST on Monday (0459 GMT Tuesday), requires face masks to be worn by all travelers on airplanes, ships, trains, subways, buses, taxis, and ride-shares and at transportation hubs like airports, bus or ferry terminals, train and subway stations and seaports. Presiden...

Fauci says vaccines may need tweaks as COVID-19 mutations spread

Coronavirus vaccine manufacturers should be prepared to tweak the makeup of their shots in case they end up being ineffective against a variety of emerging COVID-19 mutations, Dr. Anthony Fauci said Friday. Fauci issued the warning in a virtual White House coronavirus task force briefing when asked if the new strain of COVID-19 that is popping up in Los Angeles should be of concern for other big cities. “(We) will have to be nimble to be able to just adjust readily to make versions of the vaccine that actually are specifically directed towards whatever mutation is actually traveling at any giv...

Covid vaccine rollout urgent as new strains take hold

The international spread of more infectious coronavirus strains has made inoculating a maximum number of people as quickly as possible more urgent than ever, experts say.

Vaccines are already being rolled out across 73 countries or territories, with more than 86.5 million doses administered so far, including 26 million in the United States and 22.7 million in China according to an AFP tally Thursday.

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Cuomo undercounted New York nursing home deaths by as much as 50%: report

Thousands more New York state nursing home residents may have died of COVID-19 than Gov. Andrew Cuomo's administration has publicly acknowledged, according to a report issued Thursday by the state's attorney general.

The report by Attorney General Letitia James said a survey of dozens of nursing homes conducted by her staff suggested the state's failure to include in its official counts residents who died in hospitals after being sickened by COVID-19 in facilities had led to an undercount of as much as 50%. To date, the state Health Department says some 8,400 nursing home residents in New York have died of COVID-19.

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22 year-old US student in charge of distributing vaccines injected friends

The student CEO of a company tasked with distributing coronavirus vaccines in Philadelphia admitted Thursday that he had given some doses to friends, sparking anger in the US where the rollout of shots has been sluggish.

Philadelphia's local government employed Philly Fighting Covid, a group founded by 22-year-old Andrei Doroshin last year, to distribute thousands of Covid-19 vaccines across the eastern US city.

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