2don MSN
Flu and COVID vaccination rates are "alarmingly low" in Massachusetts, state health official says
Fewer people in Massachusetts are getting their seasonal flu and COVID vaccinations as the number of respiratory infections ...
At the end of December, New York saw one of its worst single weeks for flu hospitalizations in years, while states like ...
Flu cases in Boston and across Massachusetts are continuing to tick up as a new variant circulates, with public health ...
A midsummer COVID-19 spike is surging across much of the country with several states, including Massachusetts, reaching “very high” levels of viral activity, according to the Centers for Disease ...
Massachusetts health officials reported 7,499 new COVID-19 cases and 76 new deaths in the last week, with the new data released Thursday. In total, there have been 1,942,303 cases and 20,972 deaths ...
For much of the past two months, the number of people hospitalized with COVID in Massachusetts has been rising again. Hospitalizations have leveled off in recent days, but they've stressed a health ...
The coronavirus is on the rise again in Massachusetts, reaching its highest levels in many months. The amount of virus in Boston-area wastewater has increased since late June. And new state data shows ...
COVID-19 and flu are both on the rise in Massachusetts. The latest wastewater detection levels of the SARS-CoV-2 virus in the days after Christmas, released Thursday, met or surpassed the post-holiday ...
5don MSN
Newton couple visited all 351 cities and towns in Massachusetts, found "joyful moments everywhere."
After the COVID lockdown, a Massachusetts couple decided to visit every city and town in the state. This year, they finally ...
Several Massachusetts nurses say working conditions are the biggest reason their colleagues leave the industry.
The latest CDC data on long COVID in U.S. adults and an alarming World Health Organization (WHO) statement about its long-term impact underscore the pandemic's lingering and debilitating effects. Like ...
COVID-19 won’t be taking the summer off. Experts say the virus likely will continue to circulate in the population, causing more infections and hospitalizations, though probably not a dramatic surge ...
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