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Moving scenes show the first coronavirus vaccine in the US being administered to healthcare workers across the country
Moving scenes show the first coronavirus vaccine in the US being administered to healthcare workers across the countryhttps://www.businessinsider.in/science/news/moving-scenes-show-the-first-coronavirus-vaccine-in-the-us-being-administered-to-healthcare-workers-across-the-country/slidelist/79776239.cms2020-12-17T14:22:46+05:30
2020-12-17T13:32:19+05:30
Moving scenes show the first coronavirus vaccine in the US being administered to healthcare workers across the country
Lauren FriasDec 17, 2020, 14:22 IST
Vincent Kalut / Photonews via Getty Images
Healthcare workers administered shots to their colleagues across the nation this week, beginning the next long-awaited phase of the pandemic since it began in March.
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Pfizer expands covid-19 vaccine rollout to hospitals across the US
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Jared S. Hopkins
, The Wall Street Journal
More front-line health-care workers receive the first dose of the shot as hospitals devise rationing methods for limited supplies
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More U.S. hospitals on Tuesday began receiving shipments of the Covid-19 vaccine developed by Pfizer Inc. and BioNTech SE, with doctors and nurses being inoculated for the first time.
Pfizer and logistics companies continued distribution of its two-dose vaccine, as they worked to meet the government’s goal of distributing millions of doses to 636 sites across the country by Wednesday. About 2.9 million doses are set to be delivered by the end of the weekend to more than 1,000 locations.
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How Robotic Gait Training Could Help Brain-Injured Kids Move Better
Gait training using robotic exoskeletons improved motor function in adolescents and young adults with acquired brain injury, according to New Jersey-based researchers, in
The authors are Kiran Karunakaran, PhD, Naphtaly Ehrenberg, MS, and Karen Nolan, PhD, from the Center for Mobility and Rehabilitation Engineering Research at Kessler Foundation, and JenFu Cheng, MD, and Katherine Bentley, MD, from Children’s Specialized Hospital. Drs. Karunakaran, Nolan, Cheng, and Bentley are also affiliated with the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation at Rutgers New Jersey Medical School.
Acquired brain injury often results in hemiparesis, causing significant deficits in balance and gait that adversely affect functional ambulation and participation in activities of daily living. Gait training using robotic exoskeletons offers an option for motor rehabilitation in individuals with hemiparesis, but few studies h