Winter surges may become the norm : UW researchers say COVID-19 could spike seasonally
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Washington residents get their coronavirus vaccines through Swedish s mobile vaccination clinic set up in Federal Way.Claire Maulding, Special to the Seattle PIShow MoreShow Less
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Washington residents get their coronavirus vaccines through Swedish s mobile vaccination clinic set up in Federal Way.Claire Maulding, Special to the Seattle PIShow MoreShow Less
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Washington residents get their coronavirus vaccines through Swedish s mobile vaccination clinic set up in Federal Way.Claire Maulding, Special to the Seattle PIShow MoreShow Less
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As the pace of the COVID-19 vaccine roll out speeds up and more people become eligible, global health and disease experts from the University of Washington s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) are cautioning that the virus may have seasonal spikes in the future much like influenza.
/PRNewswire/ A new paper published in Socius by researchers at the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington School of.
All the coronavirus data is moving in the right direction in most of the U.S., yet 130,000 additional Americans are projected to die from COVID-19 by June according to one widely used model.
Four reasons experts say coronavirus cases are dropping in the United States
Reis Thebault, The Washington Post
Feb. 14, 2021
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FILE - In this Jan. 27, 2021 file photo drivers wait in line at a mega COVID-19 vaccination site set up in the parking lot of Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles. Just a little more than a year after California announced its first case of coronavirus, the nation s most populous state is on the brink of recording its 40,000th death.Damian Dovarganes/AP
In recent weeks, U.S. coronavirus case data - long a closely watched barometer of the pandemic s severity - has sent some encouraging signals: The rate of newly recorded infections is plummeting from coast to coast and the worst surge yet is finally relenting. But scientists are split on why it is happening.
/PRNewswire/ The latest COVID-19 forecasts from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington School of Medicine predict.