The use of surface disinfection products boomed during the COVID-19 pandemic. These products continue to flourish as a mechanism to reduce the transmission of the severe acute.
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After a year of global pandemic, we should not be surprised that 2021 is the year when a horde of 17-year cicadas will descend on us once again.
According to the website EarthSky, billions of Brood X cicadas will emerge in a dozen states, “from New York west to Illinois and south into northern Georgia, including hot spots in Indiana, Ohio, Tennessee, Maryland, Pennsylvania and New Jersey.”
Not to worry. The cicadas will make a lot of noise with their mating calls, but they don’t sting and they’re not harmful. Locusts they are not. And they will go away, and the nitrogen from their bodies will feed the trees they once nibbled on.
COVID-19: Maintaining six-feet distance may not be enough anymore [details]
CDC noted that enclosed spaces with inadequate ventilation or air handling are the most likely setting where a person is more prone to contract coronavirus
Indian strain of COVID spread to 44 countries already: WHO
Ever since the outbreak of the coronavirus pandemic, medical experts all over the world have been advising people to maintain a safe distance of six feet to protect themselves from the viral infection. And now, a new study conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has suggested that the deadly virus is capable of spreading more than six feet through the air in certain instances.