The overall case-hospitalization rate among patients was 5.7%.
Study suggests medical masks may offer similar protecion as N95 respirators, but experts say hold on.
Public health professionals use some terms imprecisely, others incorrectly, and still others technically accurate but almost sure to be misunderstood by the public.
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As labs rush to determine variant prevalence, the CDC warns it could put more pressure on US hospitals.
An Italian study in the Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy yesterday found that 21.9% of hospitalized COVID-19 patients acquired bacterial or fungal superinfections—infection by a secondary pathogen—that complicated the course of their recovery.
On top of general hesitancy, vaccine attitudes reflected concerns about government interference in the process, including with scientific evaluation.
UK vaccine advisors also recommend 12 week intervals between doses of both vaccines to protect more people with initial doses.
The incoming administration's goals are to take stronger federal leadership to get efforts back on track and speed vaccination by five or six times its current pace.
In other developments, Australia and Japan reported cases involving the South African SARS-CoV-2 variant.
Older people, Asians, and those with Medicaid coverage and preference for a non-English language at one US hospital system had fewer completed telemedicine visits than their peers during the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a study of patients scheduled for primary care or specialty telehealth visits at the University of Pennsylvania.
As cases soar in both the UK and South Africa, scientists are scrambling to detail variant virus characteristics.
The next few months could be difficult, if Christmas and New Years gatherings and travel seed a new surge in infections.
A study of hospital air contamination in JAMA Network Open last week found that 17.4% of air samples from environments near COVID-19 patients were positive for SARS-CoV-2 RNA, the virus that causes COVID-19, but only 8.6% contained viable virus.