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Some coronavirus patients develop rashes, skin-reddening, and lesions that may be signs of underlying blood clots

Fast, Less-Accurate Coronavirus Tests May Be Good Enough, Experts suggest

For months, the call for coronavirus testing has been led by one resounding refrain: To keep outbreaks under control, doctors and researchers need to deploy the most accurate tests available — ones reliable enough to root out as many infections as possible, even in the absence of symptoms.

That’s long been the dogma of infectious disease diagnostics, experts say, since it helps ensure that cases won’t be missed. During this pandemic, that has meant relying heavily on PCR testing, an extremely accurate but time- and labor-intensive method that requires samples to be processed at laboratories.

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Coronavirus infections among younger populations are skyrocketing, WHO says

One man with coronavirus attending church service led to infection of 91 others

Virus keeps spreading as schools begin to open, frightening parents and alarming public health officials

Trump signs executive order to boost U.S. drug manufacturing

Model projects nearly 300,000 Americans could die from Covid-19 by December

NIH begin testing remsesier plus beta-1a; Israel to start human vaccine tests

New study on Asymptomatic People Carrying the Coronavirus in High Amounts

Of all the coronavirus’s qualities, perhaps the most surprising has been that seemingly healthy people can spread it to others. This trait has made the virus difficult to contain, and continues to challenge efforts to identify and isolate infected people.

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More Than 1 in 3 US Adults Use Disinfectants Unsafely

ANALYSIS: The coronavirus is never going away--The Atlantic

White House calls Arizona a coronavirus success story as state resets after huge spike in cases

Virginia becomes first state to roll out the pandemic notification app

RICHMOND, Va. — Virginia has rolled out a smartphone app to automatically notify people if they might have been exposed to the coronavirus, becoming the first U.S. state to use new pandemic technology created by Apple and Google.

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ANALYSIS: The Unique failure of the U.S to control the spread of the coronavirusco

Nearly every country has struggled to contain the coronavirus and made mistakes along the way.

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Birx warns 9 cities, California's central valley about increasing coronavirus cases

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