Covid-19 Live Updates: California, Besieged by Virus for Months, Has Most Deaths in U S
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When will it be safe to travel again? Hereâs what the experts say
It comes down to the behavior of the people, the behavior of the virus, and the pace of vaccinations.
By Christopher Muther Globe Staff,Updated February 10, 2021, 12:00 p.m.
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A passenger arrived for an American Airlines flight at O Hare International Airport on Feb. 5 in Chicago. American Airlines and United Airlines, two of the nationâs largest carriers, are anticipating having to furlough thousands of employees as both companies continue to see a pandemic-related slow-down in air travel.Scott Olson/Getty
The temptation is real. Airlines are offering incredible deals on flights and vacation packages. Vaccinations have begun, and the COVID-19 positivity rate is slowly dipping. A fatigued country wants to know: Could it possibly be time to think about booking travel? Is spring break or summer vacation within our grasp?
February 9, 2021
Dr. Anubhav Kanwar
Beebe Healthcare and Beebe Medical Group recently welcomed Anubhav Kanwar, MD, an infectious disease physician who now sees patients at Beebe Infectious Disease as well as in the hospital.
Kanwar is board certified in internal medicine and infectious diseases. He received his medical degree from Indira Gandhi Medical College in India. He completed his internal medicine residency at Oklahoma University Health Sciences Center, and completed his fellowship in infectious diseases and HIV medicine at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio.
“We’ve seen firsthand during this pandemic how critical infectious disease experts are to our community,” said Bobby Gulab, MD, Beebe Medical Group senior vice president and chief medical officer. “Beebe Medical Group is committed to bringing specialists to Sussex County, and we welcome Dr. Kanwar’s expertise to care for our community.”
Originally published on February 5, 2021 6:13 pm
Bubonic plague. Influenza. The Red Death. An infection of zombies. For Marie Lathers, reading fiction about these and other pandemics has proved to be a surprisingly comforting experience over the past year.
“Every text you read, even from back in the Middle Ages, you recognize a lot of things,” Lathers explained to
St. Louis on the Air. “It’s the same fears, same angers, the hoarding, looting and despair. It’s comforting to realize we’re not just horrible, selfish people now. And you also have the other side first-line workers who are giving of themselves to help other people. And then you have quacks giving out remedies that don’t actually work.”
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