Most people with COVID-19 do not need to go to the hospital, including those with diabetes. However, diabetes may increase the risk of severe illness. People who have breathing problems and chest pain ...
COVID hospitalizations are still below the peak level during the omicron wave. COVID-19 hospitalizations are continuing to climb in the United States, according to data from the Centers for Disease ...
Stone is a retired infectious disease physician, medical journalist, and author. Feinberg is professor of medicine/infectious disease and professor of behavioral medicine and psychiatry at the West ...
There's little evidence to suggest partygoers want to get sick on purpose. As coronavirus cases continue rising at an alarming rate in parts of the U.S., the notion of parties where guests knowingly ...
More than three years into the coronavirus pandemic, fewer and fewer people are experiencing their first Covid-19 infections. But as cases climb, those who’ve had the virus before may wonder: What are ...
The government is ready to declare COVID-19 over: The nationwide state of emergency is set to end on May 11. In California, the state of emergency concluded in February. Johns Hopkins University shut ...
I flew away on a trip, and I caught COVID. Now what? So you've joined the millions of travelers who are taking off this summer, headed for vacations, weddings, family reunions, conferences. And you ...
LOS ANGELES (KABC) -- The term "long COVID" is used to describe a wide range of health problems that many people experience long after their infection. Symptoms can fall into a wide spectrum from mild ...
ME/CFS and the closely related long COVID could be caused by damage to the brainstem, according to a new scientific theory.
With COVID-19 numbers in California spiking this summer, experts are warning the new strains driving the spread could be around for some time. The latest COVID summertime surge is being fueled by what ...
SAVANNAH, Ga. (WSAV) — With the CDC’s updated wastewater map showing high levels of COVID-19 in our area, many are concerned about the potential for virus transmission through floodwaters. But how big ...
It was the largest burst of emergency spending in U.S. history: two years, six laws and more than $5 trillion intended to break the deadly grip of the coronavirus pandemic. The money spared the U.S.