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Epidemiologist explains bird flu dairy outbreak: Your milk is fine, just don't drink the raw stuff
Crain's Cleveland Business· 19 hours agoCrain's spoke with Katrine Wallace, an epidemiologist and adjunct assistant professor in the division of epidemiology and biostatistics and division of community health sciences at the University ...
Lethally RSV Infected Animals Orally Treated with NV-387 Showed Normal Lung Histology, Indicating...
Morningstar· 5 days agoSHELTON, CT / ACCESSWIRE / May 20, 2024 / NanoViricides, Inc. (NYSE American:NNVC) (the "Company"), a global leader in broad-spectrum antiviral nanomedicines, says that the strong antiviral ...
Cities Are the Canaries in the Public Health Coal Mine
Foreign Policy Magazine· 2 days agoSix weeks after Li Wenliang blew the whistle in Wuhan on an emerging infectious disease in early...
King County health officer retires after 30-plus years in public health
Seattle Times· 6 days agoDr. Jeff Duchin is accustomed to 100-mile bike rides through the Pacific Northwest mountains, beside...
NanoViricides Bolsters Partnership Efforts - Engages Aagami Inc.
The Kansas City Star· 2 days agoSHELTON, CT / ACCESSWIRE / May 23, 2024 / NanoViricides, Inc. (NYSE American:NNVC) (the "Company"), a clinical-stage global leader in broad-spectrum antiviral nanomedicines, reports that it ...
More than a gaffe… Biden brags about time he was vice president during the pandemic
BizPac Review· 4 days agoA common concern shared online after President Joe Biden’s latest flub is that the 81-year-old cognitively challenged president has the nuclear codes. Biden was speaking to attendees at the ...
NanoViricides Bolsters Partnership Efforts - Engages Aagami Inc.
Morningstar· 2 days agoSHELTON, CT / ACCESSWIRE / May 23, 2024 / NanoViricides, Inc. (NYSE American:NNVC) (the "Company"), a clinical-stage global leader in broad-spectrum antiviral nanomedicines, reports that it ...
Moooving on with pandemics
Fergus Falls Journal· 3 days agoWith the earth in turmoil from humanity and ecological change, epidemiologists have repeatedly warned of diseases leaping from their original host to the nearest abundant species -- humans.