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Covid-19 and Christmas: How to spread holiday cheer, not the coronavirus


Winter and the holidays can be hard even in typical years: short days, cold winds, and family stress, to name a few. But the ongoing US Covid-19 surge, with
more than 200,000 new virus cases reported every day since December 7 (about double what they were a month before), is putting the hallmark activities that help sustain us holiday gatherings, meals with friends, volunteering, or a visit to see Santa in more dire limbo.
Despite being more than nine months into the pandemic, figuring out whether and how to approach a previously routine event is still complicated. And the calculus seems to change with new case rates and evolving guidelines and with our own fluctuating pandemic burnout. ....

New York , United States , District Of Columbia , North Carolina , White House , Rhode Island , New Mexico , University Of California San Francisco , Lisa Gralinski , Amesh Adalja , Keri Althoff , Krysia Lindan , American Clinical Laboratory Association , Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School Of Public Health , Emory University Rollins School Of Public Health , Guidestar Or Charity Navigator , Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School , Public Health , California San Francisco , Jodie Guest , Emory University , Rollins School , Charity Navigator , New Year , North Carolina Gillings School , Global Public ,

You can survive winter and not spread Covid-19. Here's how.


You can survive winter and not spread Covid-19. Here’s how.
Vox.com
12/22/2020
© Amanda Northrop/Vox
Winter and the holidays can be hard even in typical years: short days, cold winds, and family stress, to name a few. But the ongoing US Covid-19 surge, with more than 200,000 new virus cases reported every day since December 7 (about double what they were a month before), is putting the hallmark activities that help sustain us holiday gatherings, meals with friends, volunteering, or a visit to see Santa in more dire limbo.
Despite being more than nine months into the pandemic, figuring out whether and how to approach a previously routine event is still complicated. And the calculus seems to change with new case rates and evolving guidelines and with our own fluctuating pandemic burnout. ....

New York , United States , District Of Columbia , North Carolina , White House , Rhode Island , New Mexico , University Of California San Francisco , Lisa Gralinski , Amesh Adalja , Krysia Lindan , American Clinical Laboratory Association , Emory University Rollins School Of Public Health , Guidestar Or Charity Navigator , Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School , Public Health , California San Francisco , Vox This , Jodie Guest , Emory University , Rollins School , Charity Navigator , New Year , North Carolina Gillings School , Global Public , புதியது யார்க் ,

Now that there's a coronavirus vaccine, how do you persuade people to take it?


Print article
In Philadelphia, public health officials think block captains may be more effective than football stars in persuading people to get coronavirus vaccines.
Researchers in the Navajo Nation anticipate that directives about the shots will have to be reworded to resonate with Native people.
And in Atlanta, where a federally funded project has been working with community leaders to increase minority participation in clinical trials, physicians have a lesson to learn in how to talk to patients about vaccines.
Memo to docs? More empathy. Less authority.
These messaging strategies are aimed at winning over vaccine fence-sitters in much the way political campaigns target would-be voters. But in the life-or-death battle against the coronavirus, as much as 70% of the population must roll up their sleeves in the next few months to achieve herd immunity and stop the virus’s spread. And, unlike well-oiled political machines, public health officials say th ....

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