When your chance for a COVID-19 shot comes, don t worry about the numbers | Nation/World gazettextra.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from gazettextra.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
A third vaccine is almost here. Any one of them will do, experts say.
Johnson & Johnsonâs shot is 66 percent effective, compared to 94 percent for the others. But researchers say we shouldnât obsess about those numbers.
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A corridor at the New Brunswick, N.J. headquarters of Johnson & Johnson, where researchers have developed a long-awaited vaccine that appears to protect against COVID-19 with just one shot. It s not as strong as some two-shot rivals but still potentially helpful for a world in dire need of more doses. [ MEL EVANS | AP ]
By Kaiser Health News
Published Feb. 2
When getting vaccinated against COVID-19, thereâs no sense being picky. You should take the first authorized vaccine thatâs offered, experts say.
After the events of the Capitol insurrection on January 6, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez let people know on Twitter that she was safe. She also hinted at the time that she would give more details about her experience in the future, writing, I ll tell y all about it later.
Now, it looks like later has come: Ocasio-Cortez opened up about the details of her experience in a lengthy Instagram Live video Monday night, and it s hard to hear. In the video, the 31-year-old congresswoman emotionally detailed exactly what she went through when armed insurgents broke into the Capitol building.
Ocasio-Cortez said the experience felt like a zombie movie, pointing out that she was running through the building in heels. She and a staffer locked themselves in her office bathroom and, at one point, a Capitol police officer who she mistook for a rioter banged on her door. She said she heard someone yell, Where is she? And I just thought to myself, They got inside, she recalled. I thought