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Two Pedestrians Hit by Vehicle - Austin Woman Killed

Get our free mobile app Austin, MN (KROC-AM News) - A young woman was killed and a juvenile girl was severely injured Saturday when they were struck by an SUV in rural Austin. Mower County Sheriff Steve Stanvik says the deadly incident was reported around 7:40 PM on Mower County Road 46 near the Austin Country Club on the northeastern edge of the city. The victims were found on the roadway while the vehicle was in the ditch. Both victims were transported to the Mayo Clinic Health System in Austin with life-threatening injuries. Sheriff Sandvik says 24-year-old Mikayla Sherman of Austin later died from her injuries. Information about the identity and condition of the younger victim is not yet available.

Extreme weather conditions could delay vaccine shipments next week

COVID-19 vaccine doses below requested levels for Mayo Clinic sites in Wisconsin

COVID-19 vaccine doses below requested levels for Mayo Clinic sites in Wisconsin Locations in northwest Wisconsin received about a tenth of their requested vaccine amounts February 18, 2021 5:43 PM Greg White The system’s northwest Wisconsin locations requested 5,000 doses, but only received 500. The effort to make the vaccine available can only go as fast as the supply chain allows. “A lot of this is dependent on the state and how much the state is getting. So you know, this is kind of a weekly discussion,” said Dr. Abnash Virk with Mayo Clinic. Across the entire system, about 63,000 staff and patients have received the vaccine.

COVID-19 vaccines are starting to work in the US

COVID-19 vaccines are starting to work in the US Nicole Wetsman © Photo by JOSEPH PREZIOSO/AFP via Getty Images If you know where to look, you can see COVID-19 vaccines starting to save lives in the United States. It’s not in the overall case numbers, though those have been steadily dropping across the United States for weeks. Epidemiologists say there could be a few reasonsfor that decline: we’re past the holiday seasons surge and people changed their behavior in response to the winter spikes. And by now, many people have antibodies against the virus because of a previous infection. But vaccines probably aren’t a driving factor in that drop not enough people had been fully vaccinated against COVID-19 when the decline started, and vaccination rates are still relatively low.

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