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At least 2,500 people have died from COVID in New Hampshire. New research from the School of Public Health at Brown University and Microsoft AI Health suggests over 900 of those lives could have been saved if more people had been vaccinated.
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“Our question shouldn't be: How do we get through the next three months or six months or a year?” said Anne Sosin of Dartmouth College, “But rather: How do we make the investments to have a public health infrastructure for the future?"
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Iglesia ucraniana católica de Manchester organiza manifestación en apoyo a Ucrania en Concord. Según la CDC, esidentes de New Hampshire ya no necesitan usar cubrebocas en interiores. Científicos y legisladores hablan de la urgencia de tomar acción ante cambio climático.
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Nashua recibe subvención para financiar programas preescolares para la comunidad Latina. Se pronostica tormenta fuerte de invierno para New Hampshire, y persisten discusiones sobre ordenanzas de vacunación en la Cámara estatal.
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What do you have to prove in order to get a religious exemption? And when can an employer object?
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A new immunization database and the end of the state of emergency caused inaccurate vaccine data collection in New Hampshire.
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The New Hampshire Health Department releases daily data about COVID-19 cases. But the information doesn't always share a complete image of what’s going on in the Granite State.
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The updated data on New Hampshire's newly-released dashboard shows the white to Black COVID-19 vaccination disparity is now similar to what the state reported in early May. New Hampshire's racial and ethnic disparities in vaccination remain concerning to advocates because people of color have borne a disproportionate share of cases and deaths from the coronavirus.
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While Dartmouth has publicly announced its employee vaccine requirement, similar mandates are likely to follow across the state. All of New Hampshire's 31 hospitals are members of the New Hampshire Hospital Association, which announced support for vaccine requirements for healthcare workers.
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A new law says a COVID-19 vaccine cannot be required for New Hampshire residents to access public facilities, benefits or services. It comes in the midst of a national debate on combating the spread of COVID-19 amid the growing proliferation of the Delta variant.