COVID-19: Canada and World
Germany to scrap mask mandate in long-distance transport
2 minute read Friday, Jan. 13, 2023BERLIN (AP) — Germany will soon drop a mask mandate on long-distance trains and buses, one of the country's last remaining COVID-19 restrictions, the health minister said Friday.
The mandate will be dropped on Feb. 2, Health Minister Karl Lauterbach announced in Berlin.
Other European countries already have scrapped mask mandates in public transport, and Lauterbach faced increasing pressure to follow suit in recent weeks. Masks remain mandatory in doctors’ practices, while masks and negative tests are still required to enter hospitals and nursing homes.
Rules for local transportation are a matter for Germany’s 16 state governments, and an increasing number have dropped or are dropping their mask mandates. Some also have scrapped rules requiring infected people to isolate at home.
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Alberta premier backs off on promise to seek pardons for COVID-19 health violators
4 minute read Preview Thursday, Jan. 12, 2023EU court: Tourists may get refunds over COVID measures
2 minute read Preview Thursday, Jan. 12, 2023Mississippi reports 14th death of a child due to COVID-19
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4 minute read Preview Wednesday, Jan. 11, 2023Cyprus to require COVID-19 tests for all arrivals from China
2 minute read Wednesday, Jan. 11, 2023NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) — The government of Cyprus said Wednesday it will require all passengers arriving from China to produce evidence of a negative coronavirus test as the Asian country grapples with a nationwide COVID-19 outbreak.
The Health Ministry said it was heeding the advice of the European Union’s executive arm in requiring passengers to submit results from a PCR test taken 48 hours before their departure date.
The ministry also recommended the use of a protective face mask on all flights to and from Cyprus as well as any areas where people gather in large numbers.
The Cypriot government said the measures would take effect beginning Sunday, Jan. 15.
China preparing to expand airline service to United States
2 minute read Preview Wednesday, Jan. 11, 2023Japan, South Korea protest China visa stoppage in COVID spat
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4 minute read Preview Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2023WHO Europe: no immediate COVID-19 threat from China
3 minute read Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2023COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) — The director of the World Health Organization’s Europe office said Tuesday that the agency sees “no immediate threat" for the European region from a COVID-19 outbreak in China, but more information is needed.
China is battling a nationwide outbreak of the coronavirus after abruptly easing restrictions.
Hans Kluge said that, based on the information WHO had received from china, there was no threat, but more detailed and regular information was required from China to monitor the evolving situation.
“We cannot be complacent,” he added.
China halts visas for Japan, South Korea in COVID-19 spat
6 minute read Preview Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2023China economy recovering but hampered by virus outbreaks
6 minute read Preview Monday, Jan. 9, 2023Wife of ‘American Horror Story’ driver sues over COVID death
3 minute read Monday, Jan. 9, 2023BOSTON (AP) — The wife of a late Massachusetts man is suing the companies involved in the 2021 production of “American Horror Story” on Cape Cod, alleging their lack of precautions to prevent the spread of COVID-19 led to his death.
In a lawsuit filed last week in federal court in Boston, Patricia Woodward, of East Bridgewater, Massachusetts, alleges that Twentieth Television, Ryan Murphy Productions and the Walt Disney Co. failed to follow their own COVID-19 safety protocols when filming in Provincetown in early 2021.
Paul Woodward worked as a passenger van driver, shuttling crew between the hotel and various filming sites. He tested negative when he began working on the project in February 2021. He left the project for the hospital with COVID-19 symptoms in mid-March. He died of COVID-19 on April 18. He was 67, according to an obituary.
“He passed away on the morning of our 25th anniversary,” wife Patricia Woodward said in an interview with NBC10 Boston. “So that day, instead of going out to dinner or having champagne, I had to go to the funeral home and look for a casket for him.”
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