
Reducing Your Health Risks With Vaccines
Adults and children need vaccines to help prevent disease. The types you need may depend on your age, health history or where you work and travel.
Your child’s back-to-school physical is a great way to start the school year in the healthiest way possible. Know how to prepare and make the most of this annual visit.
Adults and children need vaccines to help prevent disease. The types you need may depend on your age, health history or where you work and travel.
The COVID-19 vaccine from Pfizer is safe, effective, and now available for children starting at age 12.
Moderate vaccine side effects like an injection-site reaction are not cause for alarm. Here’s what you should know about coronavirus vaccines.
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.
Some people with COVID-19 experience PASC, also called "long COVID-19," where symptoms linger for months.
Your mask can block virus particles that you exhale and can protect you from respiratory droplets from others, too.
Donated blood from those who are healthy and the blood plasma of recently-recovered coronavirus patients is needed now more than ever.
With the first coronavirus vaccine coming soon, get the facts about the vaccine so you can feel informed and confident.
The CDC recommends creating a household plan to help protect your health and the health of those you care about. Here’s an isolation strategy if a family member has or is suspected of having COVID-19...
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