Coronavirus Frequently Asked Questions
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COVID-19 cases rose slightly over the last week, prompting San Diego County public health officials to once again urge residents to get vaccinated and boosted.
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At issue: Should ex-troops continue to face consequences for refusing the vaccine order, even though the order has been rescinded?
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NPR asked COVID-19 experts how we should keep weighing risk as we enter the fourth year of the pandemic.
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After three years, the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center is ceasing operations. Its data dashboards and maps became go-to sources for information from the early days of the pandemic.
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The pandemic is waning, but COVID-19 remains a threat, county officials say.
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Insurers, employers, taxpayers and other consumers will all be affected as drugmakers move these products to the commercial market in May. How much you'll pay depends on your health insurance.
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New York City began mandating COVID-19 vaccines for municipal employees in July 2021. The mayor said more than 96% of city employees are vaccinated.
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The state said it is not exploring emergency rules to add the COVID-19 vaccine to the list of required school vaccinations.
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Children ages 19 and under died from COVID-19 at a rate at 1 per 100,000, making it rare, but still a leading cause of death among that age group.
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President Joe Biden has informed Congress that he will end the twin national emergencies for addressing COVID-19 on May 11, as most of the world has returned closer to normalcy nearly three years after they were first declared.