A nurse at MountainView Hospital contracted the virus while treating patients. She received treatment at Southern Hills and nearly died, but she made “a miraculous recovery.”
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University Medical Center in Las Vegas has spent more than $25 million on protective gear and other equipment to fight coronavirus so far this year.
University Medical Center recently began prescribing hydroxychloroquine to high-risk emergency room patients who test positive for COVID-19 but do not require immediate hospitalization.
Experts say wearing gloves when you’re out and about won’t protect you if they transmit the virus to another surface, then you touch your eyes, nose or mouth.
We asked readers to #ShowYourMasks and people responded. Some are crocheted, made from T-shirts, liquor bags and airline eye shades.
Among the questions covered: Who should be tested for COVID-19 and where can they get tested? How should I wear a mask and what sort of protection do cloth masks provide?
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is urging the public to wear cloth masks, citing increasing evidence that people can have the virus without knowing it.
Patterns and instructions for do-it-yourself face masks are all over the Internet, and making your own is a practical solution to the nationwide shortage.
Corey Huh was turned away three times by hospital staff when he attempted to visit his wife, Adriana, because of hospital policies brought on by coronavirus.
Open Arms Communty Church on Sahara Avenue expects to welcome up to 50 worshippers on April 12, despite virus outbreak.
UNLV Medicine is offering curbside coronavirus tests — a nasal swab test — by appointment.
You’re washing your hands countless times a day to try to ward off the coronavirus, but what about your phone?
Virtual Sunday services, Bible studies and other programs will fill in while houses of worship are closed.
Owners, doggy day cares keep pets — and their people — happy, healthy during coronavirus outbreak.
Moves follow closure of schools, abrupt layoff of workers as the valley copes with coronavirus outbreak fallout.
If you think you have been exposed to COVID-19, symptoms include shortness of breath, coughing and fever. Here’s what to do next.
Patients and doctors alike are parsing signs of illness to figure out who needs what tests or care and how worried they should be.
The new coronavirus can live in the air for several hours and on some surfaces for as long as two to three days, tests by U.S. government and other scientists show.
The health care workers are under home quarantine after exposure to a patient there who tested positive for the new coronavirus, a hospital spokesman confirmed late Monday.
In the past two months, “coronavirus” has become a household word. But how much do we know about the virus and the disease it causes, COVID-19?