If a soldier “believes they have a chronic condition attributed to an in-service event, injury or diagnosis (to include COVID-19), they are highly encouraged to file a claim [for disability benefits,” VA spokesperson Gina Jackson told Army Times. Jackson also pointed to a law signed earli...
Here's what to do if you test positive for COVID while pregnant, plus what to know about symptoms and treatment.
Potential impacts of COVID-19 pandemic: What will happen to nursing after the pandemic? It is likely to involve new technologies and new ways of workingMcClunie-Trust, PatriciaKaitiaki Nursing New Zealand
There are certainly some that believe “gaslighting” with the goal of getting things “back to normal” for the purposes of boosting the economy, even at the risk of encouraging the public to act as if COVID-19 never happened, is hazardous. I tend to agree that if municipal and governmen...
“To date, we’ve seen virtually little, little activity…We don’t know what’s going on right now.” And that’s throughout the southern hemisphere, including COVID-19 hotspots such as Brazil, Osterholm noted. “We have to be careful not to assume that’s what’s going to happen ...
According to a report by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in June 2022, while more than 40 percent of adults in the U. S. reported having COVID-19 in the past, 19 percent are currently still having "long COVID," the long-term physical fallout of coronavirus...
MORE: Biden continues to 'improve steadily' after testing positive for COVID-19, his doctor says "Historically, when we're talking about COVID vaccines, we're talking about boosters that would happen at some time post your previous vaccine," said Dr. John Brownstein, an ep...
As the number of cases of COVID-19 rises, experts continue to learn more about the disease. They know that symptoms include fever, cough and shortness of breath. But what does the virus do inside your body to cause those symptoms?
and India are not synchronized, so waves in one country don’t necessarily mean another surge will happen in the other country. “If anything, the COVID-19 situation in the U.S. is as good as it's ever been, and there's no reason to believe right now ...
MORE: 5 years ago, the WHO declared COVID a pandemic. Here's a look at the disease by the numbers There are still many questions, however. Health care professionals are working to find answers, such as how many people have truly died, how long the virus spread undetected in the U.S....