Los Centros para el Control y la Prevención de Enfermedades (CDC) de EE. UU. Han actualizado las pautas de enmascaramiento desde que se redactó este documento. Obtenga la información más reciente.
As a chronic neurologic disorder, multiple sclerosis is a major risk factor for a more severe case of COVID-19. Find out how people with MS can take special care to avoid the coronavirus. Also: Learn the signs and symptoms of MS and discover copycat diseases that look like MS.
How does it affect your body? Can it have long-term affects? We talked to one of our critical care specialists, Heather Strah, MD, to answer these questions and to help us paint a picture of what it’s like to be a coronavirus patient.
We have received many questions about the risk levels associated with various activities. To help you decide, we put together an infographic ranking the risk level of common activities, and outlined some steps you can take to recognize if you’re in a risky COVID-19 situation.
It is clear that asymptomatic people may still have the ability to spread the virus to others. We provide advice on what to do if you think you might have the virus.
Written by Anne Peterson, the daughter of Ming Wang. Wang caught COVID-19 aboard a New Zealand cruise ship. He was admitted to Nebraska Medical Center at the end of March. He passed away June 8.