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Coronavirus Today: Where are the COVID-19 treatments?

Tuesday, July 13. Here’s what’s happening with the coronavirus in California and beyond. Newsletter Get our free Coronavirus Today newsletter Sign up for the latest news, best stories and what they mean for you, plus answers to your questions. Enter email address You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times. COVID-19 vaccines have made it possible for us to return to an almost normal life. With case numbers at levels not seen since March 2020, it’s tempting to think that the threat of serious illness is behind us. Advertisement It’s too late for vaccines to help these people. What they need is treatments. Which raises an important question that’s often overshadowed by news about the vaccination campaign:

MOMI-Vax study evaluates COVID-19 vaccination during pregnancy and postpartum

Tags » Emory University is participating in a study evaluating immune responses to COVID-19 vaccines, when the vaccines are administered during pregnancy or within two months after delivery. The study, called SARS-CoV-2 Vaccines in Pregnancy and Postpartum or MOMI-Vax, is sponsored and funded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health. MOMI-Vax is being conducted by the NIAID-funded Infectious Diseases Clinical Research Consortium (IDCRC).  MOMI-Vax is open to people who have received any of the FDA-authorized COVID-19 vaccines. The early COVID-19 vaccine clinical trials generally excluded pregnant women, so there is limited data on immune responses for this special population. However, after the FDA authorized the vaccines, regulators gave people who were pregnant or soon to be pregnant the option of choosing to get the vaccines. Tens of thousands of pregnant and breastfeeding people across the country have b

Milledgeville man survives heart, kidney transplant surgeries

He says his faith carried him through the surgeries. Author: Molly Jett (13WMAZ) Updated: 6:18 PM EDT July 5, 2021 MILLEDGEVILLE, Ga. A Milledgeville man is getting a second chance at life through the gift of organ donation! Pastor Tony Fraley is known for reading the Bible and serving people. He is a husband, a father, a mentor and, now, a double organ transplant survivor. If it had not been for [God], and my early upbringing of knowing Him, said Fraley. I don t think I would have made it through. For the last 23 years, Fraley has been facing congestive heart failure.  His medicine stopped working last year, so on November 11, 2020, he was admitted to Emory University Hospital. 

Cancer and chemotherapy won t deter Paralympian from competing

Cancer and chemotherapy won t deter Paralympian from competing
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