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Covid-19

5 lessons from the coronavirus about inequality in America

The coronavirus is a global threat, but the pandemic has an uneven impact across the U.S. It exacerbates existing inequalities and creates new challenges.

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Gov. Greg Abbott to let restaurants, movie theaters and malls open with limited capacity Friday

The businesses must limit occupancy to no more than 25%. Abbott said the state's stay-at-home order "has done its job to slow the growth of COVID-19."

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Coronavirus in Texas: Southwest Airlines announces first quarterly loss in nearly 10 years

Our staff is closely tracking developments on the new coronavirus in Texas. Check here for live updates.

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Fear of coronavirus propels some smokers to quit

In 40 years of smoking, Katie Kennedy has tried four times to quit but always went back to cigarettes. Today, she is summoning a new mental image when a craving comes on: rows of COVID-19 patients hooked to ventilators.Kennedy’s dad also smoked. He was on a ventilator before he died, and seeing how invasive the machine was and watching his discomfort and distress made Kennedy vow not to die like that.“I just decided it’s time to protect my lungs as much as I can,” said Kennedy, 59, who started a cessation class in Sacramento in March. “COVID-19 is quite a motivator.”Early studies suggest that ...

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COVID-19 tests are free -- except when they’re not

Even before a novel virus swept around the world, Anna Davis Abel wore a mask to protect herself from getting sick.

The 25-year-old writer lives with lupus, a chronic autoimmune disease that makes her more susceptible to catching a virus or an infection. Davis Abel’s doctor cleared her to travel to a literary conference in San Antonio in early March. Then she developed a sore throat and low-grade fever several days after arriving home in Morgantown, West Virginia.

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'Catastrophic harm' feared as Trump uses emergency powers to keep meat-packing plants open

"We only wish that this administration cared as much about the lives of working people as it does about meat, pork, and poultry products."

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Three facts on the Paycheck Protection Program you need to know

Today at the White House, President Trump will hold an event touting the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP). While the program was supposed to provide relief to small businesses, the Trump administration has provided billions to the well-connected or big corporations. Here are three key facts to know:Q1 2020 hedge fund letters, conferences and moreFACT: PPP Funds Went to Big Corporations with Access to Capital and Paid their Executives At Least $1 Million200 Publicly Traded Companies Received $800 Million. “Last week, the Treasury Department emphasized existing guidance that companies need to c...

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A selection of Latin American and Caribbean ‘coronavirus songs’

Screenshot of the song “Cancion del Coronavirus” on YouTube, by “Los Tres Tristes Tigres” Mexican band.In Latin America, artists did not stop creating music despite the pandemic and the subsequent mandatory confinement measures in place in nearly every country in the region. Music referring to COVID-19, in particular, gained a lot of traction on the internet since March.Here are nine songs that Latin American artists have produced — from their homes, for the most part — in the past couple of months. Many of them have a humoristic tone. For example, Mexicanartists usually enjoy using dark, or “...

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CDC recommends social distancing for dogs, cats, other animals

The Centers For Disease Control and Prevention is now recommending that cats, dogs and other animals keep the same social distancing as recommended for humans.The recommendation was made after a small number of animals — including dogs and cats — were reported to test positive for COVID-19 after they had had close contact with a person who had the disease.While the first coronavirus infections were thought to be linked to a live animal market, the virus is now “primarily spreading from person to person,” the CDC said in a statement on its website. “At this time, there is no evidence that anima...

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Coronavirus pandemic creates suicide risk: 'This could last years'

After years of a steady climb in suicide deaths, prevention advocates worry there could be a mental health fallout from the coronavirus pandemic for years to come.Consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic are also risk factors for suicide, experts say, including prolonged isolation, a down economy with massive job losses, and an uptick in domestic violence.That could lead to more suicides in the coming months, or even years, said Jonathan Singer, associate professor of social work at Loyola University Chicago and president of the Washington, D.C.-based American Association of Suicidology.“We’ve ne...

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Women bear the brunt of the social and economic crisis caused by COVID-19, experts say

MIAMI — Ingrid Londono feels that the coronavirus affects her on all fronts. The 40-year-old nurse started a new job on April 1 and it has been hard for her to learn from a distance and to prove herself as a professional, especially in English, her second language.With her 10-year-old son at home taking remote classes, she worries as much about the gaps that may remain in his education, at a moment that the help of a tutor cannot be used, as the times that the child interrupts her and does not allow her to focus on work.“The work has doubled, you are managing the stress of everyone and yoursel...

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US virus cases hit a million as Germans wear masks in shops

Berlin (AFP) - The United States reported its millionth coronavirus case as hard-hit European countries took tentative steps towards lifting lockdowns, with masks mandatory in all German shops from Wednesday.Excitement over a move towards normality in many places was tempered by fear of new outbreaks and growing evidence of the economic devastation wreaked by the pandemic.The crisis has left tens of millions unemployed in the US, which has by far the highest number of confirmed COVID-19 fatalities -- around a third of the global death toll of 214,000, according to an AFP tally.Forecasts warn o...

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Republican Brian Kemp could double Georgia’s COVID-19 fatalities by letting shelter-in-place expire: report

The Republican governor of Georgia is weighing whether to let a statewide lockdown expire as the state passes 1,000 COVID-19 fatalities.

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