Por: WGN-TV Nation September 25, 2022
Posted: Sep 24, 2022 / 02:13 PM CDT Updated: Sep 25, 2022 / 06:37 AM CDT SHARE SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. () – Once a COVID-19 infection sets in, the virus has extreme differences in how it impacts an unvaccinated person’s body. Throughout the pandemic, novel coronavirus proved to be lethal in some patients. “(COVID) can attack almost anything in the body with devastating consequences,” cardiologist Harlan Krumholz of Yale University told... + full article
Forbes USA Business October 03, 2022
Photo credit getty The Great Resignation. The Great Reshuffle. The Big Quit. The Great Rethink. Quiet Quitting. Ghost Quitting. It doesn’t matter what you call it, the events over the past few years have caused employees to reflect on the role of work in their lives and, in... + más
6 Signs That ‘Quiet Firing’ Could Be Trending In Your Workplace | Forbes
Julia Keller: Why is ‘quiet quitting’ a thing for everyone, including Serena Williams? Quit out loud. | Chicago Tribune
ABC News USA Health September 29, 2022
Citing concerns about the lingering and sometimes debilitating long-term impacts of on the body -- and observed inequities amongst minority patients suffering disproportionately from the virus -- medical experts on “” issued the first guidance of its kind to diagnose and... + más
How to kick antidepressant drugs without triggering a relapse: new research | Newsweek
Dreaded Side Effect Rears Its Ugly Head in Latest COVID Variant | The Daily Beast
ABC News USA Health September 28, 2022
Most for the year as districts aim to bring kids back to a setting that resembles the pre-pandemic normal.Masks are now optional in most classrooms and, last month, the Centers for Disease and Prevention said it was , which allowed students who were close contacts of those who... + más
Top CPS officials privately warned a new Near South school could undermine neighboring schools, harm Black students | Chicago Sun Times
New Yorkers, facing poorly performing schools, need more choice | New York Post
Portland Press Herald USA Health September 24, 2022
A study using the electronic health records of more than 6 million Americans over age 65 found that those who had COVID-19 ran a greater risk of receiving a new diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease within a year. The study, led by researchers at Case Western Reserve University... + más
There's a growing dementia crisis in the veteran community: Alzheimer's Q&A | The Advocate
How To Spot The Early Signs Of Alzheimer's | Newsweek
Time USA Health September 24, 2022
Until recently, running was a major part of Emma Zimmerman’s life. The 26-year-old freelance journalist and graduate student was a competitive distance runner in college and, even after she graduated, logged about 50 miles per week. So she tentatively tried to return to her... + más
New guidance released on diagnosing, treating long COVID symptoms | ABC News
With the highly transmissible versions of Omicron now of the COVID-19 infections in the U.S., most people have likely gotten infected, even if they’ve been vaccinated and boosted. So people are naturally asking whether they really need to get the , which is the first to target... + más
Moderna-backed mouse study offers first head-to-head BA.5, BA.1 booster data | Ars Technica
Here’s Why Experts Believe the New Omicron Booster Will Work | Time
The Daily Beast USA World September 22, 2022
All over the world, the rates of death and hospitalization from keep dropping. But our successful mitigation of the worst outcomes of the 33-month-old pandemic belie a growing crisis.More and more people are surviving COVID and staying out of the hospital, but more and more... + más
Mystery as to why new COVID variants have stalled in growth | ABC News
Hundreds of Americans still dying of COVID-19 each day ahead of the fall | ABC News
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