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Airports Launch COVID-Style Screenings

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Overview
 · 1d
Airports Step Up Screenings After Nipah Virus Cases in India
Health officials across parts of Asia are stepping up disease checks after several people in India were diagnosed with Nipah virus, a rare but deadly infection that can spread from animals to humans.

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 · 1h
Nipah Virus Outbreak Leads Airports to Launch COVID-Style Screenings
 · 2d · on MSN
Airports launch COVID-style health checks after outbreak of deadly virus
 · 11h
Nipah scare: These Asian airports revive Covid-era screenings after outbreak in West Bengal— What you need to know
Nipah scare prompted airports across parts of Asia to reintroduce Covid-style health checks.

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 · 1d
Nipah Virus Outbreak: All About The Disease With No Cure As Asian Airports Tighten Screening
 · 1d
Nipah virus outbreak in India triggers Asia airport screenings
7h

Is COVID over? Trump policies at odds with understanding long-term harm

Federal officials in May 2023 declared an end to the national COVID pandemic. But more than two years later, a growing body of research continues to reveal information about the virus and its ability to cause harm long after initial infections resolve, even in some cases when symptoms were mild.
1don MSN

Pritzker claims country under Trump worse than COVID pandemic where people died in droves

Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker said Tuesday that the second Trump administration is actually "slightly worse" than COVID, despite the pandemic deaths.
2don MSN

COVID's long shadow is looming over a new generation of college students

Colleges have moved on from the pandemic, but a cohort of students is catching up.
1d

Test positive for COVID-19? Here's what you should do, ODH says

As COVID-19 hospitalizations persist in Ohio, find out what to do if you test positive and where to get vaccinated.
17h

Garbarino launches inquiry into $1B in COVID reimbursements that NY hospitals haven't received

WASHINGTON — Long Island GOP Rep. Andrew Garbarino has launched a congressional inquiry into more than $1 billion in federal COVID-19 disaster reimbursements that remain unpaid to health networks in New York State and billions of dollars more owed nationally for these emergency expenses.
1d

Leftover COVID spike fragments kill crucial immune cells but are less deadly in omicron

New research shows that after the body's defenses kill the virus behind COVID-19, leftover digested chunks of SARS-CoV-2 spike protein can target specific immune cells based on their shape. The revelations could explain why certain populations of cells that detect and fight infection are depleted in patients with severe COVID-19,
MedPage Today
1d

New COVID Vaccine Limits: Who Is Considered High-Risk?

New FDA approval language for COVID-19 vaccines is sowing confusion about which conditions put people at greater risk for severe disease and who can avoid the inconvenience and cost of off-label immunization. That confusion may deepen as the rift widens ...
University of California, San Francisco
6d

Solving Long COVID: How Decades of HIV Research Paved the Way

Discover how UCSF is leading the charge in Long COVID research, uncovering key findings that advance our understanding of the condition. UCSF researchers have adapted innovative tools and methodologies—originally developed during the AIDS/HIV epidemic,
11d

Northwestern study of long COVID patients shows how an app can track recovery

In a new study, researchers report that even those who improve continue to see ups and downs that impact their quality of life.
4don MSN

Do I have the flu, COVID or RSV in California? What to know as viruses spread

Respiratory viruses are usually most active from October through March, health officials say.
GB News on MSN
9h

Covid could trigger new allergies years after infection with risk rising by up to 74%

Growing evidence suggests coronavirus infection may trigger the development of new allergies, adding another burden for the estimated 20 million Americans currently living with long Covid. Research indicates individuals who contracted the virus face a substantially elevated risk of developing allergic conditions.

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