For the first time in 12 weeks, both cases and hospitalizations in Clark County increase this past week, according to new state data.
Mary Hynes
Mary Hynes returned to the Review-Journal in August 2019 as the newspaper’s health reporter after working in public affairs and communications for MGM Resorts International. She previously worked as an editor and a reporter at the RJ. The University of Colorado graduate also worked as a reporter at newspapers in Colorado. She is a native of Oregon.
The winner in the overwhelmingly Democratic district in east Las Vegas would replace term-limited Assemblywoman Maggie Carlton.
The challenger in Assembly District 16 denounces woke Democrats, while the incumbent says as a Thai-Mexican she can best represent district.
VA Secretary Denis McDonough urged veterans to seek medical care and compensation under one of the largest expansions of VA healthcare services in U.S. history.
Dr. George Peter Chambers engaged in “sexual improprieties that constitute sexual misconduct,” according to the Nevada licensing board.
With the rate of new cases declining, there are signs that the virus may be getting under control.
After declining for 10 straight weeks, COVID-19 hospitalizations plateaued in Clark County this week and increased slightly statewide.
Gov. Steve Sisolak announced Thursday the launch of ArrayRx, a discount program for both generic and brand-name drugs.
Hospitalizations and cases continue their free fall. But is the pandemic really over?
Experts weigh in on who needs an updated booster — and when — as demand has been low so far at the Southern Nevada Health District.
Fremont Public Health Center, an arm of the Southern Nevada Health District, is now open and offering primary care and family planning services.
For this Henderson Couple, serving minds young and old is a family affair
As more people get the monkeypox vaccine, and as others develop immunity as a result of infection, health officials hope that outbreaks of the once-rare virus will get under control.
Wastewater surveillance earlier this week detected the monkeypox virus in samples at most of Clark County’s wastewater treatment plants.
Even though there’s some good news in this summer’s COVID data, some groups continue to be hit hard by the disease, a Review-Journal analysis indicates.
