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A newly distinguished University of New Mexico professor discusses her clinical research and advocacy around Long COVID.
According to a study published in JAMA Network Open, 70% of U.S. adults would conduct a home test for suspected COVID-19.
What to know about travel insurance Travel insurance can reimburse you for lost luggage, missed flights, trip cancellations ...
By 2030, every baby born in the UK could have their entire genome sequenced under a new NHS initiative to "predict and ...
The virus killed at least 20 million people, wiped at least $10 trillion from the global economy and upended billions of ...
Jess always struggled to manage her weight, however a year after using the controversial Mounjaro vaccine, she has now lost ...
India is seeing a rise in COVID-19 cases, with 4,302 active infections as per the Health Ministry on June 4, 2025. The surge is linked to emerging variants NB.1.8.1 and LF.7, while JN.1 remains the ...
India is seeing a rise in COVID-19 cases, with 4,302 active infections as per the Health Ministry on June 4, 2025. The surge is linked to emerging variants NB.1.8.1 and LF.7, while JN.1 remains the ...
No cases of intentional misidentification of COVID-19 patients have been reported, and a COVID-19 diagnosis requires documentation, such as a positive test. Falsifying those documents would be ...
If your COVID-19 rapid test turns positive, but the line is faint, unfortunately, it still means you have COVID-19. However, a re-test might be in your future.
If you test positive—faint or not—it means that you have infectious COVID-19 particles in your body, Dr. Russo says. But how dark the line is does give you a little insight into what’s going ...