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Fauci promotes COVID-19 vaccination during talk at Rainbow PUSH Coalition convention
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1 in 3 Wisconsin nursing homes violated COVID-19 safety rules
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Reflections on the Plague Year From an Anti-Ageism Activist
The pandemic didn t make ageism worse, it exposed what s been there all along
By
Credit: Getty
Something awful has happened. I remember that being my first, groggy, early-morning thought several times in my life (not counting after tragic breakups): after JFK was shot; when 9/11 happened; and during the spring of 2020, as a novel coronavirus spread across the Earth.
Well into last summer, waking up felt like echo-locating, the way bats do, in an unfamiliar space. Professionally, it felt like being picked up by the scruff of the neck and compelled to think bigger and be braver.
The Drinks Business
10 February 2021 By Christian Smith
A student who hails from Toronto in Canada has shared his mother’s childhood recipe that he says helped him to regain his sense of taste and smell after COVID-19.
23-year-old Kemar Gary Lalor, a Canadian architecture student who is based in Toronto, recently spoke to Buzzfeed News about how his family’s experience with COVID-19 lead him to discover his mother’s remedy, one that she herself was given as a child in Jamaica.
Lalor’s mother, Trudy-Ann Lalor tested positive for COVID-19 and lost both her sense of taste and smell, while 23-year-old Lalor also lost both senses but was never tested for the respiratory illness.
jwzzhang
Role: Assistant Professor
Dr. Jingwen Zhang s research interests include health promotion (e.g., sexual health, reproductive health, and physical activity), social influence, and interventions utilizing innovative online communication platforms. Current research efforts focus on the development of persuasive online networks using mobile technologies and computational approaches. She is also involved in research on communication for development, an interest that traces back to her work with UNICEF. She completed her doctoral studies at the Annenberg School for Communication, University of Pennsylvania.
Dr. Zhang’s previous studies have been published in a wide range of journals, including
American Journal of Public Health, Annual Review of Sociology, Journal of Health Communication, Preventive Medicine, Health Psychology, etc
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