CDC TRIPLES its list of coronavirus symptoms: Loss of taste and smell and muscle pain are now included as official signs of infectionPreviously, the CDC had just three symptoms of coronavirus on its website: fever, cough and shortness of breathThis weekend, the agency expanded its list to include chills, repeated shaking with chills, muscle pain,…
By Edmund DeMarche, Fox News April 24, 2020 | 12:16am Enlarge Image The Centers for Disease Control headquarters Tami Chappell / AFP The Centers for Disease Control has tripled the number of symptoms that could be indicators of coronavirus, including muscle pain, headache and new loss of taste or smell. WGME reported Thursday that the…
Get all the latest news on coronavirus and more delivered daily to your inbox. Sign up here.The Centers for Disease Control has tripled the number of symptoms that could be indicators of coronavirus, including muscle pain, headache and new loss of taste or smell.DO THESE ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS WEAKEN DISEASE?WGME reported Thursday that the CDC previously listed three…
Laurence Olivier, Wuthering Heights (1939) United Artists Laurence Olivier’s performance embodies Heathcliff’s dichotomy of hard and soft. Oliver’s presence on screen is distinguished and sympathetic, given his deep, dark eyes, knife-sharp jaw, and a background in Shakespearean productions that made him a household name. In the 1930s, masculinity was in a crisis (Isn’t it always?).
4 min read The following story contains spoilers for The Pitt season 2, episode 6, "12:00 P.M." LIKE SO MANY other viewers of The Pitt, I watched the show's first season in a binge. And for a show that's so fast-paced and where each episode truly bleeds directly into the next, that felt right. For
6 min read Kimmie Ng, M.D., a Boston oncologist, started noticing an alarming trend in her work a few years ago. Men in their 20s, 30s, and 40s—runners, CrossFitters, lifelong nonsmokers—were streaming through her door at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. They all appeared lively and strong—yet there they were, battling colorectal cancers, a family of