Recent Blogs
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Health Care
What to Know About Coronavirus Vaccines and Their Side Effects
Estimated read time:Moderate vaccine side effects like an injection-site reaction are not cause for alarm. Here’s what you should know about coronavirus vaccines.
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Coronavirus Resources
How mRNA Speeds Up Vaccine Development
Estimated read time:Many COVID-19 vaccines are being made using synthetic mRNA, which leads the body’s protein production in cells to help fight the virus. Read more, here.
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Coronavirus Resources
How Vaccines for Coronavirus Were Made
Estimated read time:Learn how new vaccines, including the COVID-19 vaccine, are developed and tested before being distributed to our communities.
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Coronavirus Resources
New COVID-19 Guidelines in Place for Fully Vaccinated People
Estimated read time:Vaccinated people can visit with others who are fully vaccinated and, in some cases, those who are not vaccinated, but there are important safety precautions to follow no matter what.
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Public Health
What Pregnant or Breastfeeding Women Should Know About the COVID-19 Vaccine
Estimated read time:What Pregnant or Breastfeeding Women Should Know About the COVID-19 Vaccine
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Coronavirus Resources
Long-Haulers, Long COVID-19, PASC: When Coronavirus Symptoms Linger
Estimated read time:Some people with COVID-19 experience PASC, also called "long COVID-19," where symptoms linger for months.
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Health Care
What to Know About the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 Vaccine
Estimated read time:Johnson & Johnson announced that Phase 3 trials are complete for its COVID-19 vaccine and show the single-dose shot to be 85% effective overall at preventing hospitalization and death in all regions...
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Coronavirus Resources
Masks Lower the Risk of Spreading or Getting COVID-19 by More Than 70%, Studies Show
Estimated read time:Your mask can block virus particles that you exhale and can protect you from respiratory droplets from others, too.
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Coronavirus Resources
When Can You Get a Coronavirus Vaccine?
Estimated read time:When a COVID-19 vaccine becomes available, it will initially be in short supply and distributed in phases. Read more about each phase, here.