knowledge saying, and by the way, a lot of doctors that i have been interviewing on my radio show and elsewhere have been saying the same thing even if the antibodies go down the t-cell immunity where where the body would recognize, if, in fact covid was reintroduced to your body. well it matters a lot because you have a limited amount of vaccine so infect people who had covid-19 previously don t need the vaccine frees up a lot of shots for people throughout the world. so science matters here but the big story, this is the russian dossier all over again. this stinks to high heaven, lab gate, trying to gate, whatever you want to call it. remember when donald trump suggested this came out of china with a lab leak? remember that? sean: by the way, they started the crown of viruses,
Lamont to speed up eligibility in CT COVID vaccination plan that inspired president s national timeline
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Syringes filled with COVID-19 vaccine wait on a table at Hartford HealthCare’s new mass vaccination clinic on the west campus of Sacred Heart University, in Fairfield, Conn. March 10, 2021.Ned Gerard / Hearst Connecticut MediaShow MoreShow Less
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Gina Kelly, right, and Gina Christakos, fill syringes with COVID-19 vaccine at Hartford HealthCare’s new mass vaccination clinic on the west campus of Sacred Heart University, in Fairfield, Conn. March 10, 2021.Ned Gerard / Hearst Connecticut MediaShow MoreShow Less
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A Connecticut COVID vaccination plan that partly “inspired” the president’s national timeline for all American adults to be eligible for the shot could be sped up even more, Gov. Ned Lamont said Friday.
Data: Up to 40% of CT COVID cases could have UK strain
Dave Altimari, CTMirror.org
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As Connecticut recorded its 7 millionth COVID test this week, lab data suggests the number of cases caused by the UK variant could be rapidly rising.Erik Trautmann / Hearst Connecticut Media
The state quietly passed a milestone this week, recording its 7 millionth COVID-19 test, but even as the pace of testing has slowed, laboratory data suggest that the number of cases that could be caused by the B.1.1.7 variant is rising sharply.
The new data released late Thursday by Dr. Nathan Grubaugh, an associate professor of epidemiology at Yale’s School of Public Health, show there were at least 152 confirmed cases of the B.1.1.7 variant at the end of February.