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J&J vaccine appointments: What Cincinnati providers are doing amid pause
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Have a J&J vaccine appointment scheduled? Here s what local clinics, health departments advise Briana Rice, Cincinnati Enquirer © Eric DeFreeuw, provided by Cincinnati Children s Hospital Medical Center Ben Dropic, 16, getting a COVID-19 vaccine at Cincinnati Children s Hospital Medical Center. Two of his younger siblings are enrolled in a clinical trial of the Pfizer vaccine on children ages 5 through 12 at Cincinnati Children s.
Vaccine providers and public health agencies across the Cincinnati region reacted quickly Tuesday after the Food and Drug Administration and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommended a pause in the distribution of the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine. The pause came after reports of blood clots in individuals who received the vaccine.
6pm EST:
Thursday, April 8
1pm EST: Howdy Partner: Collaborating and Connecting Beyond Campus – A panel discussion on outreach moderated by Dr. Malinda Lowery
Friday, April 9
12pm EST: Match/Make – A Showcase of Artist/Scholar Collaborations featuring artists Kamara Thomas, Jessica Stark and Iris Gottlieb and grad student scholars Deanna Corrin (Geography), Jacob Griffin (Anthropology) and Elias Gross (Music)
4pm EST: Humanities Futures – An undergraduate student led relfection on the Humanities Futures program and their work with the Black Communities Conference
Our Theme: “What Now?”
We chose the theme “What Now?” to reckon with this historic moment. In a time when there is division political and physical, grief that is uniquely personal and broadly cultural, how do move ahead as people endeavoring to engage the public? Scholars and artists on campus and off have had to innovate their organizing tools and change their expectations. This symposium is a moment to
February 3, 2021
Researchers from Cornell and Northwestern University have devised a new method of using extracts derived from bioengineered bacteria to create vaccines that protect against life-threatening infections caused by pathogenic bacteria.
Because the technology can be easily reconfigured for different pathogenic foes and freeze-dried for portability and refrigeration-free storage, it could be a game-changing approach to fighting infection, especially in locations where access to such medicines is limited. Provided
A collaboration between Cornell and Northwestern University has led to the creation of iVAX, which uses extracts derived from bioengineered bacteria to create shelf-stable vaccines on demand.
The team’s paper, “On-Demand Biomanufacturing of Protective Conjugate Vaccines,” published Feb. 3 in Science Advances. The paper’s co-lead authors are Jessica Stark ’12, now a postdoctoral researcher at Stanford University, and doctoral student Thapakor
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