SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Health investigator Mackenzie Bray smiles and chuckles as she chats by phone with a retired Utah man who just tested positive for the coronavirus. She’s trying to keep the mood light because she needs to find out where he’s been and who he’s been around for the past seven days.…
To sign up, click here.What you will learnThe basics of a pandemicThe signs and symptoms of COVID-19Actions and requirements associated with the contact tracing processHow to apply contact tracing protocols to a range of health scenarios.About the course The free program will only be available online and will consist of 12 learning hours. Participants will…
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5 min read HEALTH SECRETARY ROBERT F. Kennedy Jr.’s previous go-to scapegoat for autism was vaccines. Now, it’s Tylenol and circumcision. Yes, really. In a Cabinet meeting on October 9th, Kennedy—who is neither a medical doctor nor an autism researcher—reignited a controversial, long-debunked claim that boys who undergo circumcision are “twice as likely” to be
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