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Author: Mike Stobbe

  • CDC panel recommends US seniors get souped-up flu vaccines

    NEW YORK (AP) — Americans 65 and older should get newer, souped-up flu vaccines because regular shots don’t provide them enough protection, a federal advisory panel said Wednesday. The panel unanimously recommended certain flu vaccines that might offer more or longer protection for seniors, whose weakened immune systems don’t respond as well to traditional shots.…

  • CDC: U.S. overdose deaths hit record 107,000 in 2021

    CDC: U.S. overdose deaths hit record 107,000 in 2021

    NEW YORK • More than 107,000 Americans died of drug overdoses last year, setting another tragic record in the nation’s escalating overdose epidemic, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimated Wednesday. The provisional 2021 total translates to roughly one U.S. overdose death every 5 minutes. It marked a 15% increase from the previous record,…

  • CDC pleads with Americans to not travel for Thanksgiving

    CDC pleads with Americans to not travel for Thanksgiving

    NEW YORK • With the coronavirus surging out of control, the nation’s top public health agency pleaded with Americans on Thursday not to travel for Thanksgiving and not to spend the holiday with people from outside their household. It was some of the firmest guidance yet from the government on curtailing traditional gatherings to fight…

  • Officials release edited CDC coronavirus reopening guidance

    Officials release edited CDC coronavirus reopening guidance

    NEW YORK • U.S. health officials Thursday released some of their long-delayed guidance that schools, businesses and other organizations can use as states reopen from coronavirus shutdowns. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention posted six one-page “decision tool” documents that use traffic signs and other graphics to tell organizations what they should consider before…

  • New virus timeline: California had 2 deaths weeks earlier

    New virus timeline: California had 2 deaths weeks earlier

    SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Two people with the coronavirus died in California as much as three weeks before the U.S. reported its first death from the disease in late February — a gap that a top health official said Wednesday may have led to delays in issuing stay-at-home orders in the nation’s most populous state.…

  • Trump moves toward promoting broader use of face masks

    Trump moves toward promoting broader use of face masks

    WASHINGTON • The Trump administration is formalizing new guidance to recommend that many Americans wear face coverings in an effort to slow the spread of the new coronavirus, as the president is aggressively defending his response to the public health crisis. The recommendations, still being finalized Thursday, were expected to apply to those who live…

  • More evidence indicates healthy people can spread virus

    NEW YORK (AP) — Scientists offered more evidence Wednesday that the coronavirus is spread by seemingly healthy people who show no clear symptoms, and the federal government issued new guidance warning that anyone exposed to the disease can be considered a carrier. A study by researchers in Singapore became the latest to estimate that somewhere…

  • Sick staff fueled outbreak in Seattle-area care centers

    Sick staff fueled outbreak in Seattle-area care centers

    SEATTLE • Staff members who worked while sick at multiple long-term care facilities contributed to the spread of COVID-19 among vulnerable elderly in the Seattle area, federal health officials said Wednesday. Thirty-five coronavirus deaths have been linked to Life Care Center in Kirkland. A report Wednesday from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention…

  • Washington man is 1st in US to catch new virus from China

    Washington man is 1st in US to catch new virus from China

    SEATTLE • The U.S. on Tuesday reported its first case of a new and potentially deadly virus circulating in China, saying a Washington state resident who returned last week from the outbreak’s epicenter was hospitalized near Seattle. The man, identified only as a Snohomish County resident is in his 30s, was in good condition and…

  • Boom in overdose-reversing drug is tied to fewer drug deaths

    Boom in overdose-reversing drug is tied to fewer drug deaths

    NEW YORK • Prescriptions of the overdose-reversing drug naloxone are soaring, and experts say that could be a reason overdose deaths have stopped rising for the first time in nearly three decades. The number of naloxone prescriptions dispensed by U.S. retail pharmacies doubled from 2017 to last year, rising from 271,000 to 557,000, health officials…