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On Jan. 30, 2022, the WHO announced COVID-19 was still a public health emergency but that the pandemic "is probably at a transition point." Fabrice Coffrini/AFP via Getty Images, FILE ...
W hen will the COVID-19 pandemic end in the U.S.? Is it over when the president says so, by scientific consensus, or when the public thinks so? Historians of pandemics think it’s mainly the ...
Five years ago, on March 11, 2020, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared COVID-19 a pandemic. In the weeks, months, and years that followed, COVID-19 reshaped the world as we knew it. Daily ...
Colorado has enhanced pandemic readiness with new public health technologies and staff following lessons from COVID-19.
HHS ends free COVID-19 test program, citing waste of taxpayer funds as it shifts focus to chronic disease issues under Trump's Make America Healthy Again initiative. ... The COVID-19 pandemic, ...
The COVID-19 lockdown "felt like solitary confinement," a San Diego resident tells NPR. Even after many pandemic rules lifted, American society remains deeply fractured.
Five years ago, on March 11, 2020, the World Health Organization declared COVID-19 a pandemic. Whether it still is depends on who you ask. There are no clear criteria to mark the end of a pandemic ...
Another year has gone by since the 2020 pandemic and COVID-19 remains at large, so experts weigh in on what will change in 2025.
Coronavirus is officially a pandemic. Here's why that matters. The World Health Organization has finally labeled COVID-19 as a pandemic, but does it change anything or is it just semantics?
American schools and the ways students learn have changed since the height of the COVID-19 pandemic five years ago. After local and federal health officials ordered schools to closein March 2020 ...
The COVID-19 pandemic had an enormous impact on how religious communities gather for worship. In a Pew Research Center survey in July 2020 , a few months after the coronavirus struck the United States ...
Almost half of Americans say people have gotten ruder since the COVID-19 pandemic. Many Americans perceive a rise in rude behavior, and 34% say they see it almost always or often when they go out in ...
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