UA Little Rock to honor Safe Foods Co-Founder Carl Rosenbaum with 11th annual Fribourgh Award No Comments
The University of Arkansas at Little Rock will celebrate Carl Rosenbaum, co-founder of Safe Foods, as the recipient of the 2021 Fribourgh Award.
The James H. Fribourgh Award honors individuals who have made considerable contributions to the state of Arkansas through mathematics and science. This year’s reception will be from 6-8 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 21, at Chenal Country Club, 10 Chenal Club Blvd., Little Rock.
Jerry and Sherri Damerow, 2017 recipients of the Fribourgh Award, the Board of Safe Foods Corporation, and Arkansas Glass Container Corporation are serving as the event’s presenting sponsors.
Andy Cross/The Denver Post, Pool
COVID-19 vaccines await injection at the UCHealth COVID-19 mass vaccination clinic in the Coors Field parking lot Jan. 30, 2021.
UCHealth employees may soon be required to be vaccinated against COVID-19, but for now, they can get paid to get the protection.
UCHealth plans to give $500 dollars to those among its 26,000 employees who are vaccinated. Contractors can also receive the bonus. The system operates 12 hospitals and about 700 individual clinics across Colorado, southern Wyoming and western Nebraska. The bonus applies to thousands of additional contractors, like those working as security guards or valets.
Those UCHealth workers who are now vaccinated will get the money in mid-July, and anyone who gets vaccinated between now and August 22 would get it on Sept. 3.
Centura Health Employees Who Get Their COVID Vaccines Will Also Get A $500 Bonus cpr.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from cpr.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
State officials say they ve found no reason for concern after investigating 11 people who reported adverse reactions to the Johnson & Johnson vaccine Wednesday, a small wave of side effects
State officials say they ve found no reason for concern after investigating 11 people who reported adverse reactions to the Johnson & Johnson vaccine Wednesday, a small wave of side effects that prompted the closure of a mass vaccination site.
“After reviewing each patient’s symptoms, analyzing other vaccinations from the same lot of the vaccine and speaking with the CDC to confirm our findings, we are confident in saying that there is no reason for concern,” Eric France, Colorado s chief medical officer, said in a statement.
The 11 people who experienced the side effects, which included light headedness, fainting, nausea and some vomiting, were a small segment of 1,700 people who also received the Johnson & Johnson vaccine at Dick s Sporting Goods Park on Wednesday. Centura, the health system running the Dick s site, said earlier Thursday that the state was investigating the incident.