SUNBURY — A 26-year-old Sunbury man will serve three concurrent life sentences without the possibility of parole for shooting to death a Snydertown couple and their son on June 9,
5 big COVID vaccine myths, debunked
A coronavirus particle from an infected patient.
Image: National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
2021-05-05 10:00:00 UTC
What will become of the coronavirus that causes COVID-19? While it s currently not possible to completely eliminate this highly transmissible global virus, it can be largely suppressed. But nearly a quarter of U.S. adults under 65 are hesitant to get the remarkably effective COVID vaccines, even though the nation has rigorous standards for ensuring safe vaccines and public health agencies are carefully monitoring the shots to ensure they re safe over time (that s why the FDA temporarily paused the Johnson & Johnson vaccine).Â
Science
8 hours, 15 minutes
What will become of the coronavirus that causes COVID-19? While it s currently not possible to completely eliminate this highly transmissible global virus, it can be largely suppressed. But nearly a quarter of U.S. adults under 65 are hesitant to get the remarkably effective COVID vaccines, even though the nation has rigorous standards for ensuring safe vaccines and public health agencies are carefully monitoring the shots to ensure they re safe over time (that s why the FDA temporarily paused the Johnson & Johnson vaccine). Vaccination is the way out of this. Vaccination is the way out of this, emphasized
Dr. Thomas Russo, the chief of infectious disease at the University of Buffalo s Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences. It s going
Covid vaccine: Why it s wise to wait two weeks after your shot mashable.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from mashable.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
5 Critical Things Disease Experts Got Right About COVID-19
3 months, 3 weeks
safe and effective in major tests. Yet it s not just the vaccine that should be celebrated. Beginning in March when the outbreak ramped up in the U.S., infectious disease experts had a strong grip on how the pathogen would spread and
This public health expertise should be acknowledged, not least because these experts (not Twitter hacks or presumptuous armchair scientists) will continue to have a critical role in the coming months and beyond. For example, those who know viruses best have urged the public to continue vigilant masking and social distancing, because the virus is still rampant in many of our communities. This guidance is particularly important today, when widespread scientific disinformation can often go, well, viral.