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Houston doctor accused of stealing COVID-19 vial speaks out
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¿Miedo a la vacuna contra COVID-19? Mitos y realidades
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Rookie middlemen muddle the government’s effort to buy coronavirus supplies Josh Salman, Nick Penzenstadler and Dak Le, USA TODAY © Illustration by Andrea Brunty/USA TODAY Network, and Getty Images In search for COVID face masks, PPE and supplies, the government turned to rookie middlemen. Lawsuits, canceled orders and finger pointing followed.
Middlemen seeking to profit from the coronavirus pandemic have sprung up overnight to score billions of dollars in federal COVID-19 contracts, their stake as small as a mailbox rental or virtual office subscription.
Some never touch the product: They simply buy it from a manufacturer and resell it directly to the government – at an often steep markup.
After Baker relaxes some pandemic restrictions, epidemiologists urge caution
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A nurse instructed parents waiting for coronavirus tests at a post-holiday test site for Salem Public Schools.David L. Ryan/Globe Staff
The day after Governor Charlie Baker relaxed some coronavirus restrictions, epidemiologists warned that the state still must remain cautious â especially with a highly transmissible new variant in our midst.
Baker cited an improvement in some public health statistics in announcing he would lift a restriction adopted in November that had required restaurants, bars, and many other businesses to close at 9:30 p.m. He also will end an advisory that residents remain at home between 10 p.m. and 5 a.m.
Hogan makes controversial pick for secretary of health Shawna De La Rosa | Jan 13, 2021
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Governor Larry Hogan re-nominated Dennis R. Schrader to be the secretary of health, a post he has held on an acting basis since Robert R. Neall retired on Dec. 1. The choice, however, is a controversial one as the state’s lawmakers have denied his nomination in the past.
Schrader was originally tapped by Hogan for the job in 2017, but the Senate did not confirm him. That led to a legislative battle that eventually temporarily delayed Schrader’s pay.
Schrader was a U.S. Navy Captain and has worked at the Walter Reed National Military Center in Bethesda. He has been deputy administrator of FEMA and the director of the Maryland office of Homeland Security. He has also spent 16 years at the University of Maryland Medical System, where he focused on major project development and hospital operations.
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