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COVID-19 Infection Rate In Rio's Favelas Far Exceeds Official Count, A New Study Says
The number of people infected by the coronavirus in some of Brazil's poorest and most vulnerable neighborhoods could be 30 times higher than the officially registered count, according to researchers.
COVID drove families apart for Thanksgiving. They won't let inflation do the same.
Despite inflation, this year is on track for the third-busiest Thanksgiving travel season in over two decades, according to AAA.
Zoonotic diseases like COVID-19 and monkeypox will become more common, experts say
Researchers say diseases that spread between humans and animals will become increasingly commonplace as human expansion into previously uninhabited areas intensifies.
California Was Set To Spend Over $1 Billion to Prevent Wildfires. Then Came COVID-19
Communities were counting on historic levels of funding to prepare for climate change-driven disasters. Now, efforts are on hold.
Listen
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3:54
Short-staffed and COVID-battered, U.S. hospitals are hiring more foreign nurses
Montana's largest hospital recently signed employment contracts with two dozen foreign nurses. Nationwide, a backlog of 5,000 international nurses await approval to enter the U.S.
17 hospitals had no room for this COVID patient. He later died waiting for dialysis
A beloved pizzeria owner in Brimfield, Mass., had COVID-19 and needed dialysis, but it wasn't available at the hospital where he died. The health system is "breaking down," a hospital CEO says.
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•
4:57
A pub that claims to be England's oldest could close its doors because of COVID
Ye Olde Fighting Cocks in St. Albans dates back to the 8th century, with a storied past featuring medieval pigeons, Oliver Cromwell and tunnels once traversed by monks. Now its future is uncertain.
China's authorities are quietly rounding up people who protested against COVID rules
Residents held vigils to commemorate people who have died in lockdown. Several have been arrested.
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•
4:34
What does the end of the COVID emergency mean to you? Here's what Kenyans told us
Our reporter spoke to residents of Kibera, known as Africa's largest urban slum. Many had not yet heard that the World Health Organization ended the state of "emergency." They had strong reactions.
So you haven't caught COVID yet. Does that mean you're a superdodger?
A new study suggests that. yes, there are superdodgers. But explaining why they've been able to avoid the virus is a bit complicated.
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6:56
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