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National Guard members should arrive at hospitals by the end of this week to help with the latest surge of COVID-19.
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Northeast Ohio patients suffering from long-haul COVID have a range of symptoms. For some, symptoms can persist for about two weeks for mild cases. For more severe cases, it can take from six weeks to a year or more for people to recover. Long-haul COVID can be completely debilitating for people who have it.
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Health, Science & EnvironmentA potentially groundbreaking breast cancer vaccine is headed to clinical trials here in Ohio. There are currently no approved vaccines for breast cancer, which affects 1 in 8 women.
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Northeast Ohio hospitals, health departments and pharmacies are coming up with plans to prevent thousands of Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine doses from going to waste at the end of the month.
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Around 500,000 Ohioans may be struggling with long COVID, and the health care system can't keep up.
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COVID-19 vaccination rates have slowed in Ohio and across the country, and combined with new mutations of the virus circulating, health officials fear herd immunity may be out of reach.
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Cleveland Clinic researchers have potentially detected a COVID-19 variant in Ohio related to the predominant strain of virus that has been linked to the outbreak in India.
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COVID-19 vaccines could soon be opening up in Ohio to a new group: kids 12 and up. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) will decide in the coming weeks whether to authorize the Pfizer vaccine for children aged 12 to 15, said Dr. Purva Grover, director of pediatric emergency departments at Cleveland Clinic. The vaccine is currently authorized for anyone ages 16 and up.
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Clinics to help people with long-lasting COVID symptoms are being created all over the country, including two in Cleveland.Nearly 1 million Ohioans have…
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Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine announced Monday that pregnant women are eligible to receive the COVID-19 vaccine starting Thursday. Dr. Oluwatosin Goje, who works in obstetrics and gynecology (OB/GYN) at the Cleveland Clinic, says this is the best news she’s heard all week, along with the FDA's emergency use authorization of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine. “Now we have three effective vaccines that can be administered, not just to the general population, but even to pregnant patients,” she said.