As many as one in three Covid-19 patients will develop symptoms that linger for months. Their circumstances, still little understood by the medical community, may play a significant role in shaping the country’s response to the pandemic.https://t.co/qS8dR0PO6p pic.twitter.com/ToZR83kyRO
— The New York Times (@nytimes) September 28, 2020
Another consequence of our inability or refusal to contain the pandemic: Massive genetic study shows coronavirus mutating and potentially evolving amid rapid U.S. spread https://t.co/p8OHL02rcd
— Tony Romm (@TonyRomm) September 23, 2020
General consensus (AFAIK!) is that fomites are not a significant vector for SARS-CoV-2. I stopped wiping down groceries and boxes when I read @larrybrilliant wasn't doing it. (Keep washing your hands, obviously…) https://t.co/2xJyRgS5fX
— Max Kennerly (@MaxKennerly) September 18, 2020
My son, Raphael, working with Benji Wu and Leo Jacoby, made this. They're students; it was their stuck-indoors summer project. https://t.co/pJbt0EGttO https://t.co/tduKXUr2yz
— Jay Rosen (@jayrosen_nyu) September 22, 2020
As the US borders 200,000 deaths, why the hope of eliminating COVID increasingly diminishes. By me for @axios https://t.co/HHGmFzdrdV
— Bryan Walsh (@bryanrwalsh) September 20, 2020
The problem with getting tested too soon after COVID-19 exposure is that it can create a false-negative result, since there may not be enough viral particles present to be detected. How long you should wait, and what you should do in the meantime: https://t.co/XeN8xOF7nB pic.twitter.com/ic5iHFQY7r
— WebMD (@WebMD) September 18, 2020
The CDC has issued a news release to clarify what precautions should be taken by a person who has already been infected with coronavirus. What you need to know: https://t.co/8xzwOO8Vyq pic.twitter.com/4fNtn5Oqem
— WebMD (@WebMD) August 15, 2020
The CDC reversed a recommendation that previously said people don’t necessarily need to get tested for the coronavirus if they had close contact with someone with COVID-19 but don’t have any symptoms themselves. What you need to know: https://t.co/SV1OQ3a5aF pic.twitter.com/2zvDrMvRJv
— WebMD (@WebMD) September 18, 2020
Coronavirus kills far more Hispanic and Black children than White youths, CDC study finds /health/2020/09/15/covid-deaths-hispanic-black-children/?tid=ss_tw
— Terry McMillan (@MsTerryMcMillan) September 15, 2020