A new COVID-19 variant nicknamed “razor blade throat” is making its way through parts of California. While case numbers remain relatively low in San Diego County, health experts are warning people not to let their guard down.
MORE STORIES
-
Walkable neighborhoods promote active behaviors like walking for leisure or transportation to school, work, shopping or home, the authors wrote.
-
A slow warming trend in San Diego County was predicted to continue Tuesday, the last day of spring, into Wednesday.
-
Cooling was predicted to spread inland over San Diego County Monday with gusty southwest to west winds in the mountains and deserts into this evening, the National Weather Service said.
-
Diseases like Alzheimer's and Parkinson's spread through the brain like a forest fire. A new study suggests how the fire starts.
-
A new study finds men with low T who used a gel to increase the hormone did not have a higher rate of heart attacks than men on a placebo. But the anti-aging benefits are iffy.
-
Most city and county of San Diego government offices will be closed Monday in observance of Juneteenth.
-
After California’s largest home insurance provider said it wouldn’t issue new policies, consumer and insurance industry groups have ideas for what they’d like to see.
-
A homeless man has died from hepatitis A, San Diego County officials announced Wednesday.
-
The program has been so popular since its inception that 28,000 more free parking passes for state parks were added into circulation this year.
-
KPBS Roundtable wants to hear from you for an upcoming show on homelessness in San Diego. What questions do you have about the camping ban?
Sign up for our newsletters!
Keep up with all the latest news, arts and culture, and TV highlights from KPBS.
- What Trump's mass deportation looks like in San Diego
- North Park ice cream shop named best in the country
- 'I wasn't sure we'd get out.' Lakeside rancher was first to report Monte Fire
- Former U-T editor says publisher pulled ICE editorial, then fired her
- Weekend protests in San Diego ‘biggest in our history’