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Page 51 - இந்தியானா பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆரோக்கியம் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

J&J vaccine remains popular in US for its convenience, despite 10-day pause

. INDIANAPOLIS A blue card sat on the windshield of Josh Woolvin s black Hyundai Tucson on Tuesday, a spot of color in the sunshine at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. It signaled to nurses at this drive-by immunization clinic that Woolvin and his mother, Debbie Shipp, wanted Johnson & Johnson s single-dose coronavirus vaccine, not their other choice, Pfizer-BioNTech s two-shot regimen. Both selected Johnson & Johnson for its one-and-done convenience, a preference that outweighed their concerns about the extremely rare blood clots that prompted a 10-day pause in use of the vaccine. I d rather deal with the side effects than die of COVID-19, Woolvin said. There is no government data yet on whether health authorities ten-day halt in administration of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine soured people on the product, and the company declined to discuss the matter. But in spot checks across the country, people seeking vaccines and officials dispensing them appear eager to resume using

Indiana University Health Information Services Director Points Out Flaws in Healthcare Cybersecurity

Indiana University Health Information Services Director Points Out Flaws in Healthcare Cybersecurity Share: According to Indiana University Health’s executive director of information services, Mitch Parker, there are three key areas of security that are lacking in the healthcare sector: tabletop exercise, structural walkthroughs, and incident response plans. To combat these threats, healthcare providers need to perform risk assessments to find the gaps in their security and take corrective action before an attack can be made. There may not be a one-size-fits-all plan that can cover the entire healthcare industry, but even small assessments and adjustments can lead to a stronger and more secure healthcare security landscape.

Friends and Neighbors: Red-tail volunteers plant 600 trees in Muncie nature preserve

Friends and Neighbors: Red-tail volunteers plant 600 trees in Muncie nature preserve Robin Gibson, Muncie Star Press © Photo by Kyle Allen Johnson / Provided by Red-tail Land Conservancy Volunteers help to plant 600 trees in Red-tail Land Conservancy s Reber Woods on April 17, 2021. • More than 50 volunteers from Muncie, Yorktown, and surrounding communities planted 600 trees in Reber Woods on April 17. The spring tree-planting event was coordinated by Red-tail Land Conservancy, in partnership with Plant Roots Foundation and Heintzelman Hardwood Floors, to celebrate Earth Month, jumpstart restoration of a forest, and empower community members to build deeper connections with nature. Tree-planting work crews led by Indiana Master Naturalists included individuals, families, and scout troops. Reber Woods has a remnant of a mature wetland forest. The hundreds of native trees volunteers planted in an adjacent field will expand the remnant and connect it to the

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