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Breathing easier with continuity of care | Stories

Ten-year-old Tayana Graham often rides her bicycle down the dirt road that leads to her home in Kingstree, South Carolina. She circles around the house a few times before hopping off to play basketball with her younger sister. But every now and then, she has to stop and take a breath from her rescue inhaler.  “I didn’t know I had asthma until I couldn’t breathe,” Tayana said.  After suffering with wheezing and shortness of breath for years, Tayana was finally diagnosed with asthma in 2016 by Kelli Garber, D.N.P. and clinical integration specialist with the Medical University of South Carolina’s Center for Telehealth. 

Pfizer is applying for full FDA authorization, how is that different from what they have now?

Pfizer is applying for full FDA authorization, how is that different from what they have now? VIDEO: Pfizer is applying for full FDA authorization, how is that different from what they have now? By Adam Mintzer | May 7, 2021 at 6:57 PM EDT - Updated May 7 at 11:21 PM COLUMBIA, S.C. (WCSC) - Pfizer is working to have the word “emergency” no longer attached to their COVID-19 vaccine. The drugmaker announced Friday they have begun applying to the FDA for full approval of their COVID-19 vaccine for people 16 years and older. If their rolling application is approved, they will be the first coronavirus vaccine maker to have their vaccine receive this status.

Our ultimate choice is desegregation or disintegration - recovering the lost words of a jailed civil rights strategist

Skip to main content Our ultimate choice is desegregation or disintegration - recovering the lost words of a jailed civil rights strategist Bobby J. Donaldson, University of South Carolina April 9, 2021 FacebookTwitterEmail Bobby J. Donaldson, University of South Carolina and Christopher Frear, University of South Carolina (THE CONVERSATION) In a cramped cell in a South Carolina prison camp, 22-year-old African American activist Thomas Gaither wrote, “I am presently in deep contemplation as to just what our nation and our particular region of the nation prizes most.” It was Thursday, Feb. 23, 1961, and Gaither was serving a 30-day term of hard labor on a road gang for what police called “trespassing,” when he and students from Friendship Junior College staged a sit-in at a Rock Hill, South Carolina, lunch counter. The letter he was writing marked day 23.

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