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New mask guidance does not grant permission for widespread mask removal: CDC Director Walensky

New mask guidance for vaccinated individuals does not grant permission for widespread removal of masks, Centers of Disease Control and Prevention Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said on ABC's "This Week" on Sunday.

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Indian variant: UK may start vaccinating young people in hotspots, and how much faster does it spread?

Additional explanation about the CDC’s new mask guidelines

New large study finds Pfizer, Moderna vaccines to be 94 percent in health care workers

Webcast: Vaccinating the World in 2021, Monday, May 17, 11:00 AM ET

Event: WIlson Center  

Vaccinating the World in 2021

Join us for a conversation with Former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair and Ambassador Mark Green.

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Date & Time

Monday

May. 17, 2021

11:00am – 11:45am ET

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People shoould look to local guidance and rules on masking--CDC director

Misinformation surges in India amid the country's COVID-19 calamity

How pediatricians are educating vaccine hesitant families

CDC says fully vaccinated can largely ditch masks in the U.S.

Weathy nations in South Pacific and Asia lag in vaccinations

India’s Neighbors Brace for the Worst from Spreading Coronavirus

Q&A's about coronavirus vaccines for younger adolescents

Air pollution from meat production leads to nearly 18,000 U.S. deaths annually, study indicates

ANALYSIS: COVID pandemic urgency distrupted initial evidence based research efforts

How COVID broke the evidence pipeline

It wasn’t long into the pandemic before Simon Carley realized we had an evidence problem. It was early 2020, and COVID-19 infections were starting to lap at the shores of the United Kingdom, where Carley is an emergency-medicine doctor at hospitals in Manchester. Carley is also a specialist in evidence-based medicine — the transformative idea that physicians should decide how to treat people by referring to rigorous evidence, such as clinical trials.

As cases of COVID-19 climbed in February, Carley thought that clinicians were suddenly abandoning evidence and reaching for drugs just because they sounded biologically plausible. Early studies Carley saw being published often lacked control groups or enrolled too few people to draw firm conclusions. “We were starting to treat patients with these drugs initially just on what seemed like a good idea,” he says. He understood the desire to do whatever is possible for someone gravely ill, but he also knew how dangerous it is to assume a drug works when so many promising treatments prove to be ineffective — or even harmful — in trials.

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COVID-19 booster shots could help in global fight against the virus

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