Wow what a snow day! I ve been seeing lots of people.
Wow what a snow day! I ve been seeing lots of people offering to shovel, anyone I can ping later or tomorrow?
Thank
i just got second shot and waited two weeks and have read that you can t spread covid to non-vaccinated persons (like my fiancee) who isn t eligible for vaccine yet. So now I want to rejoin a gym out here and see a planet fitness opened next to target. What are people s experiences there. Yelp has mixed and old reports. I am sort of weirded out by their use of direct bank drafts for payments and their cancellation policy (by mail??? in 2021 or can you do it in person?) Also is it clean? Too crowded? are the people running it ok? your thoughts welcome. thanks
OSU Medical Students Aid Effort To Vaccinate Oklahomans Against COVID-19 thebulltulsa.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from thebulltulsa.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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UNE’s Susan Wehry thrice discusses COVID-19 vaccines in media
Susan Wehry, M.D., chief of the Division of Geriatric Medicine at UNE’s College of Osteopathic Medicine, has thrice been quoted in national publications discussing the country’s rollout of its first COVID-19 vaccines.
Wehry was first quoted in McKnight’s Senior Living on Jan. 4, in which she responded to concerns about low rates of nursing home employees becoming vaccinated against the novel coronavirus. She said there are a number of ways health administrators can alleviate staff or resident concerns about the vaccines.
“Senior living providers can make a great contribution by being transparent, providing accurate, trustworthy information from primary sources, and making the clinic experience a positive one,” Wehry told the publication.
Executive Chairman of Cherokee Nation Businesses Bill John Baker (left), Principal Chief Chuck Hoskin Jr., OSU Center for Health Sciences President and College of Medicine Dean Dr. Kayse Shrum and OSU College of Osteopathic Medicine at the Cherokee Nation Dean Dr. William J. Pettit participated in a ribbon cutting for the Tahlequah school on Friday.
Credit OSU Center for Health Sciences
The OSU College of Osteopathic Medicine at the Cherokee Nation is officially open after a private ribbon cutting.
Medical school students and faculty started using the building earlier this month.
Cherokee Nation officials had been discussing a Tahlequah medical school for about a decade before announcing a partnership with OSU in October 2018. The $40 million, 84,000-square foot facility is on the campus of W.W. Hastings Hospital.
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The sign at the entrance to Island Nursing Home in the Hancock County town of Deer Isle. Students from the University of New England’s nursing and osteopathic medicine program have been helping work at the home since a COVID-19 outbreak in November and December led to staff shortages.
Kevin Miller/Staff Writer
DEER ISLE For eight months, staff at Island Nursing Home had managed to keep the virus away from residents of their small facility in this historic fishing community.
But when COVID-19 finally arrived just before Thanksgiving, it swept through the Deer Isle nursing home with “insidious” ferocity. Every one of the home’s 62 residents was sickened – 15 of them fatally – along with 38 staff members, despite efforts to immediately segregate and isolate cases.