Coronavirus variants are like 'tidal waves' once they fully arrive

Studies suggest that persons who had Covid should get single vaccine does

Nearly 30 million people in the United States — and probably many others whose illnesses were never diagnosed — have been infected with the coronavirus so far. Should these people still be vaccinated?

Two new studies answer that question with an emphatic yes.

In fact, the research suggests that for these people just one dose of the vaccine is enough to turbocharge their antibodies and destroy the coronavirus — and even some more infectious variants.

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The Texas power grid failure: fragility and attitudes

Explanation of how have storms affected shipments of COVID-19 vaccinations

NEW YORK (AP) — Efforts to vaccinate Americans against COVID-19 have been stymied by a series of winter storms and outages that have hobbled transportation hubs and highways in parts of the country not used to extreme cold weather.

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Winter storms delay six million COVID-19 vaccine doses -_White House

The White House said Friday that winter storms have caused a backlog of 6 million COVID-19 vaccine doses, about three days worth of shipments, but they expect to clear the backlog within a week.

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G-7 leaders vow 'equitable' world vaccine access, but details scant

ANALYSIS: Most vaccine clinical trials fail to report data on participants’ ethnicity or race

Hard-hit restaurants feed COVID doctors, nurses, but donations stopped to survive

A rating of the Safest States During COVID-19 --FOX

As the U.S. continues its struggle against the COVID-19 pandemic, staying safe is one of Americans’ top concerns. Safety is also essential for getting the economy back on track, as the lower COVID-19 transmission and deaths are in a state, the more that state is able to eliminate restrictions on businesses. We’ll only be able to fully get back to life as normal once most of the population is vaccinated against coronavirus, and it will still be months before we can achieve that. The U.S. is off to a slow start so far, as only 5% of the population has been fully vaccinated against COVID-19 (received both doses) as of February 17.

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Africa reaches 100,000 known COVID-19 deaths despite earlier low rates

How scarcity of niche biotech ingredients has slowed Covid-19 vaccine production

Vaccine Developments: Pfizer seeks approval for storage at higher temperatures, J&J seeks WHO approval

Doctors vaccinate vulnerable homebound people but face time, distance challenges

CDC estimates indicate US may have enough vaccines to fully vaccinate its population by July

States are prying loose vaccine supplies that were held in reserve

RICHMOND, Va. — When tiny glass vials of coronavirus vaccine began rolling off production lines late last year, federal health officials set aside a big stash for nursing homes being ravaged by the virus. Health providers around the country figured as well that it was prudent to squirrel away vials to ensure that everyone who got a first dose of vaccine got a second one.

Two months later, it is clear both strategies went overboard.

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