by: Los Angeles Times Posted: Apr 21, 2020 / 05:31 PM PDT / Updated: Apr 21, 2020 / 05:31 PM PDT Patients arrive and are screened for COVID-19 symptoms at the medic staging area before entering the Sharp Memorial Hospital in San Diego in April 2020.(Marcus Yam/Los Angeles Times) California has made progress in protecting…
You don't have permission to access "http://www.charlotteobserver.com/news/coronavirus/article242154586.html" on this server. Reference #18.58edc43.1587436599.3d8e562
Changes are coming to a coronavirus testing site after problems last week.Police are now working with a Lee's Summit, Missouri, doctor's office to avoid terrible traffic jams.Blue Lotus Family Medicine began offering drive-thru COVID-19 antibody testing and swab testing last week.So many people showed up for testing that it caused massive traffic congestion around the…
5 min read WHEN THE JUSTICE Department released a trove of Epstein-related files on January 30 and then pulled down thousands of pages after redaction failures exposed victims’ identifying information and explicit material, I felt a familiar gut-drop. Once again, the people with the least power were being asked to pay twice—first for the abuse
You don't have permission to access "http://www.medpagetoday.com/obgyn/hrt/119940" on this server. Reference #18.5bf4d517.1771491743.1e0de1 https://errors.edgesuite.net/18.5bf4d517.1771491743.1e0de1
It’s the rare policy question that unites Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida and the Democratic-led Maryland government against President Donald Trump and Gov. Gavin Newsom of California: How should health insurers use AI? Regulating artificial intelligence, especially its use by health insurers, is becoming a politically divisive topic, and it’s scrambling traditional partisan lines.