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Who Should Be Prioritized for the Coronavirus Vaccine?
Who Should Be Prioritized for the Coronavirus Vaccine?
ratings:
Length:
18 minutes
Released:
Dec 15, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
ICU bed capacity hit zero percent in the Central Valley over the weekend. Health officials are activating a COVID surge facility in the Tulare County town of Porterville to treat patients they don’t have room for at the local hospitals.
Reporter: Alex Hall, KQED
As coronavirus vaccinations begin in California many public health experts worry that people may start letting their guard down when it comes to social distancing and other safety measures.
Guest: Dr. Kirstin Bibbins Domingo, Epidemiologist, UCSF
Frontline health care workers are first in line for the coronavirus vaccine, but which essential workers should come next? Teachers? Delivery drivers? How about the farm workers who pick California’s food crops? The state of California is working with counties to figure it out, and they may not always see eye to eye.
Reporter: April Dembosky, KQED
After making progress last month, California's Unemployment Development Department is once again facing a big backlog of claims even after a new verification system showed initial promise.
Reporter: Mary Franklin Harvin, KQED
Companies like Uber warned they’d have to raise prices if Prop 22 failed and they had to pay for employee protections. Prop 22 passed last month, and Uber’s market value surged, but they're raising prices anyway.
Reporter: Sam Harnett, KQED
Reporter: Alex Hall, KQED
As coronavirus vaccinations begin in California many public health experts worry that people may start letting their guard down when it comes to social distancing and other safety measures.
Guest: Dr. Kirstin Bibbins Domingo, Epidemiologist, UCSF
Frontline health care workers are first in line for the coronavirus vaccine, but which essential workers should come next? Teachers? Delivery drivers? How about the farm workers who pick California’s food crops? The state of California is working with counties to figure it out, and they may not always see eye to eye.
Reporter: April Dembosky, KQED
After making progress last month, California's Unemployment Development Department is once again facing a big backlog of claims even after a new verification system showed initial promise.
Reporter: Mary Franklin Harvin, KQED
Companies like Uber warned they’d have to raise prices if Prop 22 failed and they had to pay for employee protections. Prop 22 passed last month, and Uber’s market value surged, but they're raising prices anyway.
Reporter: Sam Harnett, KQED
Released:
Dec 15, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
Tele-Medicine Gets a Boost During Pandemic: Tele-Medicine Gets a Boost from Coronavirus The pandemic is changing how we interact with medical professionals. For instance, Medicare and Medicaid have expanded access to tele-health appointments for their members. by KQED's The California Report