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Missouri Most Concerning State in U S for Delta Variant, Cases Up 200 Percent Since June
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Delta variant will spread like wildfire in communities with low vaccination rates, doctor says
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Police investigate after man shot in head in St. Louis
May 23, 2021
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ST. LOUIS (AP) St. Louis police are investigating after a man was found shot in the head on Saturday.
Police said the man was conscious but barely breathing after the shooting around 5 p.m. Saturday. He was taken to a hospital and he remained in critical condition Sunday.
Investigators determined that the injured man and another man were shooting at each other when the victim was wounded. The shooting happened in the 3100 block of Sheridan Avenue in the city’s Jeff-Vander-Lou neighborhood.
Few other details were released about the shooting on Sunday. Police did not immediately identify the victim.
Why we re thinking about vaccine hesitancy wrong in communities of color: Experts
On Location: May 7, 2021
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It started with the op-eds. Even before COVID-19vaccines were widely available, newspapers opinion pages warned that some Black people would be hesitant to get the shot. Those columns often referenced the infamous 1930s Tuskegee Syphilis Study, during which doctors withheld treatment from Black men with syphilis, as evidence of lingering well-founded mistrust that might drag down vaccination rates in the Black community.MORE: The risks unvaccinated Americans are weighing
That theory wasn t just fueled by newspapers. Former President Barack Obama and former NBA player Charles Barkley both referenced Tuskegee during an April NBC special to encourage Black Americans to get vaccinated. I’m telling all my friends, Yo man, forget what happened back in the day, every Black person, please go out and get vaccinated, Barkley said.
Illustration by Rici Hoffarth | St. Louis Public Radio /
Thousands of Missouri students likely will continue to learn online from their homes next school year and after by choice, as virtual school becomes a permanent option after the pandemic subsides.
Several school districts in the St. Louis region are making their online programs permanent for children as early as kindergarten in an effort to offer more flexibility and choice. But some critics worry the isolation could have negative social and emotional effects on kids.
With no COVID-19 vaccine yet approved for children under age 16, school administrators say it’s highly likely some amount of virtual learning will be necessary next school year. But they also say their online schools are here to stay.
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