Editorâs Note:Â This story was updated on Feb. 24 to include updated data from UNLâs COVID-19 Dashboard.
Over 20,000 University of Nebraska-Lincoln faculty, staff and students have either had a cotton swab inserted into their nose or spit into a tube in the past two weeks in preparation for the start of the spring 2021 semester.
UNL opened its new, mandatory saliva-based testing program to students in the Nebraska College of Law, Nebraska College of Technical, University of Nebraska Medical Center College of Dentistry and UNMC College of Nursing on Jan. 12, according to Leslie Reed, UNLâs public affairs director.The saliva-based program opened to the rest of the UNL community on Jan. 19.
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How to Cope When You’re Angry
Seeing red? Here are ways to cool down. By Corine Gatti corine gatti
It’s such a dirty five letter word, anger. There it is written and even muttered, an ever common emotion, that can go from annoyance into a fit of rage. Crazy? Not at all. Anger is completely normal and is a healthy human emotion that we try to hide beneath the undercurrent of passivity.
We know that anger can be created by external influences such as bad memories, relationships, arguments, disappointments, shame, or betrayal. It can be set off in some people at any given moment slithering in ways through the conscious and subconscious mind. Dealing with anger is necessary to remain healthy. Researchers have found that not venting can damage your health and create other problems for relationships, and can lead to destructive behavior. It is an emotion that no one wants to chat about or express, even in a healthy manner. Psychology Today s
REVEALED: CDC missed early signs of COVID s spread by refusing to test evacuees from Wuhan, asymptomatic patients and travelers on cruise ships hit by outbreaks
A new investigation from Reuters found that the CDC s response to the pandemic in its early days was harmed by inaction from staff members
When 57 Americans were evacuated from Wuhan to Nebraska, the CDC rejected attempts made to test those who were asymptomatic
After arriving in Japan to help evacuate passengers from the Diamond Princess cruise ship, officials had to borrow PPE when theirs didn t arrive on time
Doctors also to turn away CDC staffers seeking to board the ship because they had no current experience in emergency medicine and infection control
At a key moment in the pandemic when Americans were quarantined after possible exposure to the virus, the CDC resisted studying if the disease could be spread by those without symptoms.