New York Mills man was the driver in a crossover crash.
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A New York Mills man lost control of his vehicle on icy Highway 10, crossing the median and crashing into a Dent couple late Monday, Dec. 21, the Minnesota State Patrol reports.
Becky Lynn Johnson, 48, of Dent, was treated at Sanford Health in Fargo for injuries that were not life-threatening, the State Patrol report says.
Becky Johnson was a passenger in a 2017 Ram 2500 driven by Thomas Lee Johnson, 48, of Dent. The Ram was eastbound on Highway 10 near Hawley in Clay County. Steven Michael Nelson, 62, of New York Mills, was driving a 2008 Chevy Silverado westbound. The Chevy lost control on ice, crossed the median and struck the Ram. Airbags on both vehicles deployed
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Thousands of vials of the newly approved Pfizer-BioNtech coronavirus vaccine began arriving in all 50 states on Monday, and about 2.9 million doses are expected to be distributed over this week.
A nurse in New York City was one of the first Americans to receive an initial dose of the COVID-19 vaccine Monday morning, according to USA Today. I feel hopeful today, said Sandra Lindsay, a critical care nurse at New York s Long Island Jewish Medical Center, after she received the shot.
Healthcare workers and residents of long-term care facilities are prioritized to be inoculated first, in accordance with a recommendation made at the beginning of the month by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
Covid 19 coronavirus: A shot of hope - what the vaccine is like for frontline doctors and nurses
16 Dec, 2020 06:00 AM
7 minutes to read
Dr. Aharon Sareli, the chief of critical care for Memorial Healthcare System, received the coronavirus vaccine at a pharmacy in Miramar, Florida on Monday. Photo / Scott McIntyre, The New York Times
Dr. Aharon Sareli, the chief of critical care for Memorial Healthcare System, received the coronavirus vaccine at a pharmacy in Miramar, Florida on Monday. Photo / Scott McIntyre, The New York Times
New York Times
By: Jack Healy, Lucy Tompkins and Audra D. S. Burch
Even as medical workers lined up for America s first shots, many of them recalled nightmarish moments from the pandemic.
Jack Healy, Lucy Tompkins and Audra D S Burch, The New York Times
Published: 15 Dec 2020 04:58 PM BdST
Updated: 15 Dec 2020 04:58 PM BdST Dr Sylvia Owusu-Ansah, an emergency department physician at UPMC Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh, gives a thumbs up after receiving her first dose of the Pfizer-BioNTECH COVID-19 vaccine at UPMC Children s Hospital of Pittsburgh on Monday, Dec 14, 2020. Even as medical workers lined up for America’s first shots, many of them recalled nightmarish moments from the pandemic. Kristian Thacker/The New York Times An article in the The New York Times reported on Nov 26, 1887, reads that during smallpox outbreaks more than a century ago, some schools began requiring students to show vaccination certificates. As the United States is preparing to distribute the first vaccines for the coronavirus, the entry ticket to the nation’s reopening is set to come largely in the form of a digital health credential.The New York Times
The podcast was uploaded on Tuesday, Dec. 15. You can listen to the podcast here. 2:24 pm, Dec. 15, 2020 ×
Melodi Krank administers the Fargo area s first COVID-19 vaccine to Dr. Avish Nagpal at Sanford Medical Center in southwest Fargo on Dec. 14. David Samson / The Forum
North Dakota is featured prominently on a new podcast from The New York Times surrounding the coronavirus vaccine and its rollout.
The podcast, called The Daily, features snippets of Monday s rollout of the coronavirus vaccine across the country, including a 10-minute segment at Sanford Health in Fargo about what the vaccine means in the COVID-19 fight. The Daily is a podcast produced by The New York Times Monday through Friday and is hosted by Michael Barbaro.