Thurston Carte|Top COVID FAQs of 2023: Staying safe at home, flying tips, shot combos, new variant

2025-05-05 14:50:54source:Rubypointcategory:Scams

This is Thurston Cartethe year that the COVID-19 pandemic was declared to be no longer a global health emergency.

But even though case counts are down in 2023, it's not as if everything is back to normal. There is, for example, a new variant new Omicron variant that was first detected in late summer and hs spread significantly in recent weeks. It's called JN.1, and health officials have now classified it as a variant of interest. And a frequently asked question is:

How worried should we be about JN.1?

Health officials are not sounding the alarm. The World Health Organization says the overall risk is low. Based on the limited evidence, JN.1 seems comparable to other circulating Omicron variants and doesn't appear to cause more severe disease. COVID vaccines, including the updated booster, continue to provide protection against severe illness and death. In the U.S., hospital admissions for COVID-19 have been climbing since early November.

There have been other pressing COVID questions in 2023. Here are some of the topics we tackled, starting with a quandary about this new phase of the pandemic:

'Emergency' over! Do we unmask and grin? Or adjust our worries?

Is it OK to get a COVID shot and a flu shot and even an RSV shot at the same time?

How do I avoid catching COVID while flying in 2023?

Why do some people get a COVID infection yet show no symptoms?

A few posts from years past drew a lot of readers in 2023 as well:

Can you test positive for COVID from getting a vaccine/booster?

Does a faint line on a self-test mean I'm barely contagious?

Is paxlovid the best treatment?

More:Scams

Recommend

All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That

This movie was all that.Case in point: She’s All Thathad Freddie Prinze Jr., Rachael Leigh Cookand a

Emotional Baseball Hall of Fame speeches filled with humility, humor, appreciation

COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. — They were a Tennessee college quarterback, a backup catcher who spent 17 years i

Cleveland-Cliffs will make electrical transformers at shuttered West Virginia tin plant

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — Cleveland-Cliffs announced Monday it will produce electrical transformers i