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'We need to keep schools open': Ohio health leaders urge those 16 and up to get COVID-19 vaccine


On Thursday, Franklin County moved back to Level 4 of Ohio’s COVID-19 advisory system.
Author: Angela Reighard
Updated: 11:25 PM EDT April 15, 2021
As cases of COVID-19 are going up in Ohio, health leaders are urging those 16 and older to get the COVID-19 vaccine.
On Thursday, Franklin County moved back to Level 4 of Ohio’s COVID-19 advisory system. Despite moving backward, officials with Columbus Public Health are not recommending a stay home advisory. Additionally, Columbus Health Commissioner Dr. Mysheika Roberts said Level 4 does not mean schools should close or switch to remote learning.
Children being out of school, out of sports, not having social contact for almost a year, is devastating, said Dr. Rustin Morse from Nationwide Children’s Hospital. We need to keep the schools open. It s imperative, it s safe, it s the right thing to do. ....

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Black or Hispanic kids receive less medical imaging than white kids


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IMAGE: Associate professor of pediatrics, emergency medicine and radiology, University of Pittsburgh, and medical director of point-of-care ultrasound at UPMC Children s Hospital of Pittsburgh.
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Credit: David Wallace
PITTSBURGH, Jan. 29, 2021 - A study led by UPMC Children s Hospital of Pittsburgh and the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine shows that Black children are 18% less likely to get imaging tests as part of their emergency department visit compared to White children. Hispanic children are 13% less likely to have imaging done than Whites.
The researchers suggest that this disparity results from overuse in White children, though underuse in minority children probably plays a part as well. The root cause likely stems from both patient preferences and implicit bias among providers. ....

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