With the first COVID-19 vaccine expected to arrive in Nevada on Monday, officials are making final preparations to distribute doses to health care workers.
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On Thanksgiving of last year, Ashleigh Cope’s heart stopped. The then-22-year-old had contracted a flesh-eating bacterial infection that nearly killed her in the aftermath of minor cosmetic surgery.
Then you’re in luck. Drive-thru, throat-swab testing administered by medical personnel is now being offered at Texas Station.
The Southern Nevada Health District is recommending that gatherings of more than 1,000 people not be approved for the time being.
Health agencies say disease investigation reports have “limited, if any value” to the public. Outside experts question the decision.
Valley Health System hospitals continued Friday to work on restoring their computer network after a cyberattack Sunday.
Universal Health Services, which operates six hospitals in the Las Vegas Valley, said Tuesday that its computer networks remained shut down after a cyberattack.
Las Vegas-area participants in clinical trials for the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine have received their shots. Now it’s time for one or more to get sick.
The Cleveland Clinic Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health is one of four medical institutions across the country receiving the new federal funding to research Alzheimer’s disease.
HCA hospital workers, members of SEIU Local 1107, on Friday asked Nevada hospital regulators to investigate their claims of unsafe conditions.
With no signs of the COVID-19 pandemic receding anytime soon, more trouble can be seen on the horizon with the approach of flu season.
Las Vegas intensive care nurse Geoconda Hughes discusses how the COVID-19 outbreak has made her question her career choice.
The surge of COVID-19 cases in Clark County means that some testing positive will get a text instead of a phone call.
Sunrise Hospital and Medical Center on Thursday began delaying certain elective surgeries to preserve capacity in the face of escalating hospitalizations for COVID-19.
Southern Nevada hospitals say the changing demographics of patients and the fact they are better prepared give them confidence they won’t be overwhelmed.