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COVID-19 vaccine side effect may mirror breast cancer symptom, doctors say not to panic
By: WEWS Staff
and last updated 2021-02-01 16:22:46-05
CLEVELAND â Aubrey Lewis has been a nurse at University Hospitals for four years, and for nearly the last year of that time, her work has been dedicated to fighting COVID-19.
âI work with COVID-19 patients on a daily basis,â she said. She received her first dose of the Moderna vaccine around Jan. 20. âWhen I got my vaccine, initially, I did not have any side effects at all,â she said.
But after a few days, she noticed swelling in one of her lymph nodes. âI felt under my armpit to see if there was anything there and I felt a lump. It was kind of hard, but still mobile, it moved around,â she said.
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On January 27, 2021, Virginia Governor Ralph Northam announced that he had approved a Final Permanent Standard (Permanent Standard) for preventing COVID-19 in the workplace, making Virginia the first state in the nation to implement a permanent COVID-19 workplace safety and health standard. The Permanent Standard, which applies to all employers in the Commonwealth, supersedes the Emergency Temporary Standard that had been in place since July 2020 but expired on January 26, 2021.
The Permanent Standard mirrors many provisions of the Emergency Temporary Standard. The Permanent Standard, like the Emergency Temporary Standard, requires employers to implement measures to help slow the transmission of, and protect workers from, COVID-19. The Permanent Standard continues the Emergency Temporary Standard’s requirement that employers assess the “exposure risk level” of hazards and job tasks at each place of employmen
What to Look for in a Heart Disease Doctor
Your relationship with your cardiologist matters. Here’s how to find the perfect match.
February 25, 2021
Call us sappy, but we’re in the mood to give our hearts a little love right now (and not just because February is Heart Health Month). Maintaining good heart health is essential to living a long and robust life, as evidenced by this sobering statistic: heart disease is the leading cause of death in the United States for both men and women. More than 600,000 Americans die from it every year.
No one knows heart health better than a cardiologist, so we tapped Michael Blaha, M.D., director of Clinical Research for the Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease at John Hopkins Medicine in Baltimore, to explain how to find the right doctor and develop a lasting expert-patient relationship.