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UF Health researcher explains herd immunity and how it could end COVID-19 pandemic
Bill Levesque, UF Health Communications
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UF College of Pharmacy students prepare vaccine shots at a vaccination event at Ben Hill Griffin Stadium in February. Vaccination will allow the nation to reach herd immunity in the COVID-19 pandemic. (Photo by Jesse S. Jones (Courtesy of UF Health))
GAINESVILLE, Fla. – It’s a term we’re going to hear much more frequently during the final chapter of the COVID-19 pandemic herd immunity.
With millions of Americans being vaccinated against COVID-19 every day, many are looking to the future and asking when the coronavirus pandemic will end. It’s a surprisingly difficult question that could hinge on this epidemiological concept.
| 4/20/2021
Florida hospitals face a cash crunch from COVID
During the first week of March in 2020, Sarasota Memorial Hospital was treating a record number of patients, and hospital leaders were trying to figure out where to park the dozens of excess cars. The patient traffic wasn’t COVID-related it was “just normal hospital visits or health care visits,” recalls David Verinder, president and CEO of Sarasota Memorial Health Care System but by month’s end, as the COVID-19 pandemic began to sweep through the nation, the campus looked more like a ghost town. “Volumes dropped through the floor,” he says. [Source: Florida Trend]
The Gainesville Sun Editorial Board
When Gainesville Regional Utilities moved into a new operations center on North Main Street in 2011, it opened up the opportunity to redevelop industrial land that GRU no longer needed downtown.
Ten years later, the redevelopment plan for the Power District is still a work in progress. In the meantime, affordable housing has dwindled and west-side sprawl has accelerated. Officials need to finally decide on a plan for the Power District and stick to it.
The Power District gets its name from GRU s continuing operations of the Kelly natural gas power plant downtown. The city-owned utility’s other properties in the area including parking lots, warehouses and even its downtown office are envisioned as possible locations for a walkable, mixed-use development that brings new jobs, residents and visitors to the heart of the city.
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