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I Survived COVID-19: A New Yorker's Story
Dec 23, 2020

I Survived COVID-19: A New Yorker's Story

It's 2 a.m. on a chilly mid-March morning and I am tossing and turning on the sofa in the living room of my small Harlem apartment in New York, hoping I'm not disturbing Greg, my husband, peacefully sleeping in our adjacent bedroom. Unbearable aches accompany my fever, which just jumped from low grade to 102° and persistent chills now violently shake my body. The past three days I've been lethargic and a little achy but I chalked those complaints up to jet lag. I had just returned from a two-week Scandinavia trip for work. Tonight, with the arrival of these new dreadful symptoms, I'm suddenly fearing the worst: thoughts of the coronavirus flood my mind.

As a writer, I travel the globe for a living, logging thousands of miles per year. It may sound glamorous, and it can be, but it's also a lot of trains, planes, automobiles, new people, foreign customs, crowds and interviewing sources close up for stories. It hadn't seemed like a risky business until now — the numbers of dead and dying climbing. It's a sleepless night consumed with worry.

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How the Coronavirus Is Changing US Social Media Usage
Dec 23, 2020

How the Coronavirus Is Changing US Social Media Usage

When US consumers started spending more time at home during the pandemic, they also started using social media more, providing an unexpected boost to engagement on these platforms. The coronavirus has hastened the development and popularity of new live streaming, video chat and gaming features on social networks.
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The politics behind the COVID-19 responses
Dec 23, 2020

The politics behind the COVID-19 responses

Managing an epidemic requires tackling the health consequences of the outbreak, as well as its social, political, security, and economic dimensions. This implies setting priorities between various interests and goals – in short, a lot of politics.

What follows is a non-exhaustive overview of the many considerations and important questions national authorities must reflect on in their response to COVID-19.

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Study: Ultraviolet LED Lights Can Kill Coronavirus
Dec 23, 2020

Study: Ultraviolet LED Lights Can Kill Coronavirus

Key Takeaways

  • A new study shows LEDs that emit ultraviolet light can kill the virus that causes COVID-19.
  • The UV lights can kill coronaviruses in less than 30 seconds.
  • Researchers say that eventually the technology could be used in vacuums and air conditioners.
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UV Disinfecting Fixtures to be installed at Fresno Community Centers, Fire Stations
Dec 23, 2020

UV Disinfecting Fixtures to be installed at Fresno Community Centers, Fire Stations

Whether you're sanitizing or staying socially distant, we're all finding ways to protect ourselves in the midst of a pandemic.FRESNO, Calif. (KFSN) -- Whether you're sanitizing or staying socially distant, we're all finding ways to protect ourselves in the midst of a pandemic.Fresno's city council has voted in favor of a new line of defense for the most vulnerable populations.The plan is to install ultraviolet disinfecting fixtures at community centers citywide. City council president Miguel Arias says, "We selected the two areas of city facilities that are constantly occupied and that we need to provide additional protection in case there is an outbreak".

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Coronavirus herd immunity not likely until end of next year, WHO says
Dec 23, 2020

Coronavirus herd immunity not likely until end of next year, WHO says

The much hoped-for herd immunity against the novel coronavirus is unlikely to occur in many places around the world until the end of 2021, an official with the World Health Organization said this week when warning the next few months will be "critical."

"We are going to approach the beginning of the end, we can see the light at the end of the tunnel," Dr. Soumya Swaminathan, the WHO’s chief scientist, told CNBC on Wednesday. "However, there’s still a tunnel we have to go through, and the next few months are going to be very critical."

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The Global Economic Outlook During the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Changed World
Dec 23, 2020

The Global Economic Outlook During the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Changed World

The COVID-19 pandemic has spread with alarming speed, infecting millions and bringing economic activity to a near-standstill as countries imposed tight restrictions on movement to halt the spread of the virus. As the health and human toll grows, the economic damage is already evident and represents the largest economic shock the world has experienced in decades.

The June 2020 Global Economic Prospects describes both the immediate and near-term outlook for the impact of the pandemic and the long-term damage it has dealt to prospects for growth. The baseline forecast envisions a 5.2 percent contraction in global GDP in 2020, using market exchange rate weights—the deepest global recession in decades, despite the extraordinary efforts of governments to counter the downturn with fiscal and monetary policy support. Over the longer horizon, the deep recessions triggered by the pandemic are expected to leave lasting scars through lower investment, an erosion of human capital through lost work and schooling, and fragmentation of global trade and supply linkages.

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Airborne Contaminants:Preventing Infections From Fans Used in the Home
Dec 22, 2020

Airborne Contaminants:Preventing Infections From Fans Used in the Home

Home care and hospice clinicians often encounter patients who use fans in their homes to either provide a breeze to cool themselves, make "white noise" to help them sleep, or give comfort when experiencing respiratory distress or "terminal air hunger." In the home, fans can be suspended from a ceiling to circulate the air throughout a room, but not move it in any particular direction (i.e., ceiling fan), or placed next to the patient on a bedside table, in a window opening, or on a stand or tower to move air directly toward the patient.
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Can this smart ceiling fan kill the coronavirus? Independent tests say 'yes'
Dec 22, 2020

Can this smart ceiling fan kill the coronavirus? Independent tests say 'yes'

Earlier this year -- and shortly after the onset of the coronavirus pandemic -- Kentucky-based manufacturer Big Ass Fans introduced the Haiku UV-C, a luxurious smart ceiling fan with disinfecting ultraviolet lights built into the base and aimed up at the ceiling. The pitch was pretty timely -- as the fan circulates air throughout the room, those UV lights kill airborne pathogens that cross their path.

Now, after multiple independent tests at accredited laboratories, the company tells CNET that the fan -- which starts at about $1,750 -- can kill SARS-CoV-2, the pathogen that causes COVID-19.

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What is in the $900 Billion Second Stimulus Package?
Dec 22, 2020

What is in the $900 Billion Second Stimulus Package?

On Sunday, almost nine months after the CARES Act was signed into law, Congress agreed on a second stimulus package after weeks of post-election negotiation — a $908 billion bill that is less than half the size of the original coronavirus relief package. On Monday, both the House and Senate voted to pass the second stimulus by overwhelming margins. Trump is expected to sign it into law, and Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin said Americans could start seeing stimulus checks as soon as next week.
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COVID-19 Survivors Share How to Recover During Pandemic
Dec 22, 2020

COVID-19 Survivors Share How to Recover During Pandemic

  • People who have recovered from COVID-19 are sharing their unusual experiences online.
  • Because so many people with an infection are asymptomatic, it can disrupt the feeling of being safe.
  • More people are reporting experiencing symptoms of depression and anxiety now than this time last year, or even 6 months ago. That can be from having COVID-19, being exposed to the virus, or simply living through a panders
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Can UV Light Kill the New Coronavirus?
Dec 21, 2020

Can UV Light Kill the New Coronavirus?

Ultraviolet (UV) light is a type of radiation. It has more energy than radio waves or visible light but less energy than X-rays or gamma rays.

You can be exposed to UV light via natural sunlight or through human-made sources like tanning beds.

UV light has been used as a means to kill germs like bacteria and viruses. You may have also heard of its use for killing SARS-CoV-2, the new coronavirus that causes COVID-19.

In this article, we’ll explore how UV light is used to kill germs, how effective it is at eliminating the new coronavirus, and more.

There are several types of UV light. They’re classified according to how much energy they have.

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COVID-19 - Navigating the Uncharted
Dec 21, 2020

COVID-19 - Navigating the Uncharted

The latest threat to global health is the ongoing outbreak of the respiratory disease that was recently given the name Coronavirus Disease 2019 (Covid-19). Covid-19 was recognized in December 2019.1 It was rapidly shown to be caused by a novel coronavirus that is structurally related to the virus that causes severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS). As in two preceding instances of emergence of coronavirus disease in the past 18 years2 — SARS (2002 and 2003) and Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) (2012 to the present) — the Covid-19 outbreak has posed critical challenges for the public health, research, and medical communities.
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Study Reveals UV Lights Effectively Kill a Human Coronavirus
Dec 21, 2020

Study Reveals UV Lights Effectively Kill a Human Coronavirus

In a recent study, researchers found that UV light-emitting diodes (LEDs) can quickly and effectively kill the human coronavirus HCoV-OC43. If future research finds that they are also effective against SARS-CoV-2, this technology could be an inexpensive way to disinfect surfaces, ventilation systems, and water systems in hospitals and industrial settings.
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Bernie Sanders: COVID Relief Package Is “Totally Inadequate” for “Unprecedented” Economic Crisis
Dec 21, 2020

Bernie Sanders: COVID Relief Package Is “Totally Inadequate” for “Unprecedented” Economic Crisis

As Congress is rushing to pass a new $900 billion coronavirus aid package, Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont is calling the new relief package “totally inadequate, given the nature of the unprecedented crisis that we face.” Sanders took to the floor of the Senate Friday to call for $1,200 emergency checks for every working-class adult and $500 per child.
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