COVID-19 survivors recovering with physical therapy Mary Johns is a COVID-19 survivor. She caught the virus in December of last year and spent 70 days in the hospital recovering. Now, her recovery is continuing through physical therapy. Posted: May 14, 2021 10:44 PM Updated: May 15, 2021 9:34 PM Posted By: Meredith Hackler LAFAYETTE, Ind. (WLFI)- The COVID-19 pandemic has claimed thousands of lives in the state of Indiana. However, some people survived the disease and are still recovering. Mary Johns is a COVID-19 survivor. She caught the virus in December of last year and spent 70 days in the hospital recovering. I couldn t move at all. I forgot how to walk,” said Mary Johns. “So they taught me how to slide off a board onto the wheelchair.
Currently serving as California s Small Business Advocate, Guzman said the US is at a crossroads moment for small businesses. Experts say that the new administrator will need to raise the SBA s public profile in order to effectively reach businesses across the country and support the ongoing economic recovery. Isabel Guzman is President-elect Joe Biden s choice to head up the US Small Business Administration, the transition team announced on Friday. I am honored to return to the SBA at a crossroads moment for small businesses, Guzman in a speech accepting her nomination. She joins an economic team headlined by former Fed chair Janet Yellen for the Treasury, and Rhode Island Governor Gina Raimondo, recently announced to lead the Commerce Department.
Skip to main content In the nation s capital, Black families reel from the pain of hundreds lost to covid-19, killings Michael E. Miller, The Washington Post Dec. 30, 2020 FacebookTwitterEmail 9 1of9People prepare on July 7, 2020, to march on the street where Davon McNeal, 11, was fatally shot by a stray bullet after a July 4 cookout organized by his mother, a violence interrupter trying to persuade the Washington, D.C., community to put down their firearms.Washington Post photo by Jahi ChikwendiuShow MoreShow Less 2of9Medical workers arrive Dec. 22, 2020, in the Carver-Langston neighborhood in Northeast Washington, D.C., which has been hit hard by covid and gun violence.Washington Post photo by Jahi ChikwendiuShow MoreShow Less