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How social media helped COVID experts become household names during pandemic

How social media helped COVID experts become household names during pandemic
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Why common colds might spike when kids return to school

  Melinda Wenner Moyer, The New York Times  Published: 13 Mar 2021 04:54 PM BdST Updated: 13 Mar 2021 04:54 PM BdST A Baltimore teacher and student after schools reopened for in-person classes, Nov 16, 2020. Hong Kong schools reported a surge in colds when students resumed in-person learning. Here’s what it means for kids in the US, and what parents can do to prepare. Rosem Morton/The New York Times When many students in the United States go back to in-person learning this fall, parents and school administrators may have to contend with an unexpected infectious disease problem: more colds than usual. ); } That’s the caution coming from researchers in Hong Kong, who published a study last week detailing a spike in common colds after students returned to classrooms in the fall following nearly a year of remote learning. Specifically, the researchers reported almost seven times more large outbreaks of acute upper respiratory infections (involving 20 people or more) co

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Why Common Colds Might Spike When Kids Return to School

Why Common Colds Might Spike When Kids Return to School Hong Kong schools reported a surge in colds when students resumed in-person learning. Here’s what it means for kids in the U.S., and what parents can do to prepare. Credit.Rosem Morton for The New York Times By Melinda Wenner Moyer Feb. 26, 2021 When many students in the United States go back to in-person learning this fall, parents and school administrators may have to contend with an unexpected infectious disease problem: more colds than usual. That’s at least the caution coming from researchers in Hong Kong, who published a study last week detailing a spike in common colds after students returned to classrooms in the fall, following nearly a year of remote learning. Specifically, the researchers reported almost seven times more large outbreaks of acute upper respiratory infections (involving 20 people or more) compared with those recorded in 2017, 2018 and 2019 combined.

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