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Beers, burgers, books and bucks: Alberta businesses offer rewards for a COVID-19 shot

  CALGARY As thousands of Albertans continue to roll up their sleeves for a COVID-19 vaccine, some businesses and institutions across the province are offering incentives or rewards for customers and staff who get their shot. Cold Garden Beverage Company in Calgary’s Ramsay neighbourhood is trading proof of a shot for a cold one, called ‘Cans for Community Immunity’ “Beer is all about community, said cofounder Dan Allard. “Frankly we just want to be back to normal so we’re doing everything we can to keep that momentum going and we’ll give some free beer to do it.”

Vaccinated students attending University of Lethbridge eligible to win full tuition

Article content LETHBRIDGE, Alta. The University of Lethbridge says it’s worth a shot for students to get vaccinated before school starts this fall. The university in southern Alberta announced Monday that students who receive a COVID-19 vaccination before Sept. 9 are eligible to win one of nine grand prizes of full tuition for this fall, which are worth about $3,600 each. We apologize, but this video has failed to load. Try refreshing your browser, or Vaccinated students attending Alberta university eligible to win full tuition Back to video University president Mike Mahon says the school is not making vaccinations mandatory to attend, but notes the contest is a great idea to encourage people to get their shots.

The puzzle of play

The puzzle of play Today s best articles Daily business briefing Solving COVID newsletter Anyone who has ever chucked a tennis ball in the general vicinity of a border collie knows that some animals take play very seriously. The intense stare, the tremble of anticipation, the apparent joy with every bounce, all in pursuit of inedible prey that tastes like the backyard. Dogs are far from the only animals that devote considerable time and energy to play. Juvenile wasps wrestle with hive mates, otters toss rocks between their paws, and human children around the world go to great lengths to avoid make-believe lava on the living room floor.

A new study from Dr Cheryl Currie of the University of Lethbridge suggests Albertans who have never before been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), are beginning to show PTSD sympto

  LETHBRIDGE, ALTA. Dr. Cheryl Currie is an epidemiologist and public health professor at the University of Lethbridge who has spent a large portion of her career working with individuals who have been diagnosed with PTSD. In June 2020, she surveyed more than 900 Albertans from across the province to identify whether or not individuals were exhibiting symptoms of pandemic induced PTSD and whether they had substantially increased their use of substances such as cannabis and alcohol. The more PTSD symptoms [people] were having due to the pandemic; nightmares, rumination where they couldn t get the pandemic out of their head, blaming themselves or others for the pandemic, the more they were having these symptoms, there was a very strong association with how much they were increasing their alcohol and cannabis use, said Currie.

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