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It s been hard to get the company s site to show up on search engines due to limits tech giants have placed on COVID-19-related services, he said. They re preventing people from capitalizing or being opportunistic surrounding the pandemic. But in the same breath, I think it s limiting the ability, for organizations who are providing genuine services, the ability to advertise or broadcast a lot to the larger public.
A lab worker processes a COVID-19 test Thursday.(Austin Grabish/CBC)
Even though there has still been one daily Winnipeg flight to the U.S., few people are flying.
You can t get a tattoo because of COVID-19 restrictions, but you can now get them removed.
You can also now get other aesthetic, or cosmetic, non-medical procedures done, including Botox shots, tummy tucks, breast enhancement and lip enhancements.
Under changes posted on the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Manitoba website late last week, doctors who provide care that is not medically indicated, including aesthetic services and procedures, are able to begin doing so again, starting Jan. 8.
It means a clinic such as Dr. Earl Minuk s on Grosvenor Avenue can reopen for the first time in weeks, while others, such as Skinwise on Taylor Avenue or Derm Centre on Grant Avenue, can again begin procedures on the cosmetic side.
Winnipeg Free Press
Winnipeg Free Press
A Manitoba physician who claimed the COVID-19 pandemic is an attempt to create a totalitarian society is practicing medicine again.
However, he can only do so if he agrees to stop spreading false information about the deadly disease.
Dr. Blair Hrabarchuk, an internal medicine physician who practices in Dauphin, posted several messages on his Facebook page in August that questioned the seriousness of the pandemic.
FACEBOOK
Blair Hrabarchuk practices at the Dauphin Medical Clinic in the Prairie Mountain Health region.
He claimed face masks don’t help reduce the transmission of the virus, and argued forcing people to wear them is a human rights violation. He stated, without evidence, that more than two-thirds of COVID-19 fatalities were among people who would have died anyway in 2020.