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Where Did Most COVID Deaths Happen in California? – NBC 7 San Diego

Updated 4 hours ago COVID-19 has now claimed more than 604,000 American lives. NBC 7 Investigates has been tracking death rates per county, and found a staggering contrast across California. Some counties reported nearly four times as many COVID-19 deaths as others. According to the COVID-19 deaths reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), San Diego County has seen 132 deaths per 100,000 people. That’s better than the average for California counties 164. Riverside County has reported 209 deaths per 100,000 people, and Imperial County has reported 323 deaths - the highest rate in the state. Public health officials say there are several factors at play in the death rate disparities, such as the types of jobs people work in each county and public interventions, like stay-at-home orders and mask mandates, which San Diego County put in place in May 1, 2020.

Social Justice as Part of the Remedy for What Ails Us

Social Justice as Part of the Remedy for What Ails Us New center in Sanford Institute for Empathy and Compassion focuses on issues in health care June 03, 2021  |  Scott LaFee; Mario Aguilera News release Eliminating racial inequity demands empathy and compassion, but also social justice. The newest center within the T. Denny Sanford Institute for Empathy and Compassion at UC San Diego will have that focus, created to identify, understand and resolve social justice issues in health care that primarily affect racial and ethnic minorities, women, LGBTQ and under-privileged communities. “Across this country and throughout society, we face extraordinary challenges regarding racial injustice, especially those impacting marginalized members of our communities,” said Gentry Patrick, PhD, a professor of neurobiology in the Division of Biological Sciences and the newly named director of the Center for Empathy and Social Justice in Human Health within the Sanford In

Dual impacts of extreme heat, ozone disproportionately hurt poorer areas

 E-Mail Scientists at UC San Diego, San Diego State University and colleagues find that extreme heat and elevated ozone levels, often jointly present during California summers, affect certain ZIP codes more than others. Those areas across the state most adversely affected tend to be poorer areas with greater numbers of unemployed people and more car traffic. The science team based this finding on data about the elevated numbers of people sent to the hospital for pulmonary distress and respiratory infections in lower-income ZIP codes. The study identified hotspots throughout the Central Valley, areas of San Diego County east of downtown San Diego, and places like San Bernardino, where Los Angeles basin smog is often trapped by surrounding mountain ranges, among others.

Dual Impacts of Extreme Heat, Ozone Disproportionately Hurt Poorer Areas | Scripps Institution of Oceanography

Dual Impacts of Extreme Heat, Ozone Disproportionately Hurt Poorer Areas | Scripps Institution of Oceanography
ucsd.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from ucsd.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Fact check: CDC s new guidance for fully vaccinated people is not out of the blue

Fact check: CDC s new guidance for fully vaccinated people is not out of the blue Devon Link, USA TODAY Replay Video UP NEXT The claim: The CDC lifting its COVID-19 guidelines out of the blue . proves they lied to you the whole time © Provided by USA TODAY The updated CDC rules still call for everyone to wear masks in crowded indoor settings such as buses, planes and hospitals. On May 13, theU.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced massive relaxations in COVID-19 guidelines for vaccinated individuals. Fully vaccinated people can now stop social distancing measures and mask-wearing indoors, with few exceptions

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