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The emergence of three new coronavirus variants could drastically change our timeline to reach herd immunity.
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Colorado plans to start offering the coronavirus vaccine to residents ages 65 to 69 and all pre-school and K-12 teachers on Feb. 8, Gov. Jared Polis announced Friday.
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Dr. Anthony Fauci also said the administration hoped to be able to start vaccinating children by late spring or summer.
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The state is a medical hub with giant hospitals and a huge healthcare workforce. Young adults who work in that field are getting the COVID-19 vaccine while at-risk seniors wait on the sidelines.
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Amesh Adalja of Johns Hopkins University says strict guidelines around how to roll out the vaccine have discouraged health care providers from giving spare doses to noneligible groups.
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How can Americans make smart decisions if they are offered a COVID-19 vaccine outside of normal distribution? Medical ethics expert Arthur Caplan joins us to discuss.
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Cadres of volunteers, mostly medical professionals, are part of a little-known federal emergency program launched in the aftermath of 9/11. Increasingly, states are deploying them against COVID-19.
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The U.S. is striving to vaccinate as many people as possible against COVID-19 — and keep them up-to-date with boosters. But some states are lagging behind. See how yours is faring.
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The efforts come as new data from the state estimates nearly 68 percent of the vaccine doses have been given to white residents.
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Colorado Governor Jared Polis addresses tackling the inequities of the Covid-19 vaccine rollout and how his administration is working with Tribal…