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Dating apps offer a snapshot about a person s life, but in the space of a few weeks, a surprising health issue has emerged as a dealmaker or heartbreaker: Have you had the coronavirus vaccine? | AFP-JIJI
AFP-JIJI Feb 13, 2021
New York – Dating apps offer a snapshot about a person’s life, but in the space of a few weeks, a surprising health issue has emerged as a dealmaker or heartbreaker: Have you had the coronavirus vaccine?
Though officials are still reminding people to wear masks and distance even after being vaccinated, some experts suggest it's time to strike a more optimistic tone and emphasize the hope and freedoms vaccines bring rather than the restrictions that will need to continue.
An anti-lockdown protest at Queen s Park on April 25 attracted about 200 demonstrators.
A year into the COVID-19 pandemic, after 10 months of lockdowns, social distancing and other restrictions, people are exhausted and confused and looking for any information that tells them there’s a way out of this thing.
And that desperation leads a lot of people to fall for COVID-19 misinformation that’s running rampant online, which is why Nova Scotia Senator Stan Kutcher and the University of Alberta’s Timothy Caulfield created Science Up First.
A collective of concerned scientists, researchers, information experts, health-care providers, science communicators and organizations, Science Up First is here – on the web, on Facebook, on Twitter and on Instagram – to push back against the falsehoods by offering hard facts and reality-based information to anyone who’s willing to see it.