From the World Health Network

COVID-19 is airborne, and COVID particles can hang in the air for hours. It is still possible to stay safe at indoor gatherings.

For more information on proper ventilation, see our ventilation guidelines. For information on staying safe in everyday life, see our guidelines for individuals.

Welcome to Covid Safe Network

By clicking “Read More” below you will find links to businesses and schools that take Covid precautions to protect their customers and staff. You will also find links to studies and news stories that demonstrate the severity of Covid-19.

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COVID SAFETY 101 (2023)

Covid (SARS-Cov-2) is short for severe acute respiratory syndrome
coronavirus 2. The virus is airborne and neuroinvasive. It causes vascular
disease and dysregulates immune systems. 

The pandemic is not over, the virus never became milder, and the government has continually lied about the threat.

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Covid Lists

A curated list of 337 bookmarks (and growing) about all things COVID-19. This is a great first stop if you are looking for information ranging from Research to consumer products.

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List of 2250 COVID-19 Studies

This extensive list of research studies and articles was curated by Zotero. Zotero is a free, easy-to-use tool to help you collect, organize, annotate, cite, and share research. Information dates back to December 2019 before the world knew we were heading into a pandemic. 

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T Cells & Covid-19: A Basic introduction

COVID-19 epidemiology update: Current situation

Summary of COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations and deaths, cases following vaccination, testing and variants of concern across Canada and over time. Older versions of this report are available on the archived reports page.

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Comparative study showed that children faced a 78% higher risk of new-onset conditions after they had COVID-19

We compared 1656 exposed and 1656 unexposed children from 1 February 2020 to 30 November 2021. The overall excess risk for new-onset conditions after COVID-19 was 78% higher in the exposed than unexposed children. We found significantly higher risks for some new conditions in exposed children, including mental health issues (aHR 1.8, 95% CI 1.1–3.0) and neurological problems (aHR 2.4, 95% CI 1.4–4.1).

Conclusion

Exposed children had a 78% higher risk of developing new conditions of interest after COVID-19 than unexposed children.

Read the Study

By Ruth Ann Crystal MD
Updated Weekly

Dr. Ruth’s SubStack publishes updates on COVID news and more weekly. If you subscribe for free, you can receive her weekly updates by E-mail. Information is about COVID-19 in the US.

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Use of Electronic Clinical Data to Track Incidence and Mortality for SARS-CoV-2–Associated Sepsis

Original Investigation 
Infectious Diseases
September 29, 2023

Question  How did the frequency and mortality for SARS-CoV-2–associated sepsis differ from presumed bacterial sepsis during the COVID-19 pandemic?

Findings  In this retrospective cohort study of 431, 017 inpatient encounters at 5 Massachusetts hospitals between March 2020 and November 2022, SARS-CoV-2–associated sepsis was present in 1.5% of all admissions and 28.2% of SARS-CoV-2–positive hospitalizations, whereas presumed bacterial sepsis was present in 7.1% of hospitalizations. Between the first and last study quarters, SARS-CoV-2–associated sepsis mortality decreased from 33.4% to 14.9% while presumed bacterial sepsis mortality was stable at 14.5%…

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FREE COVID Safety Resource List

Your ultimate guide to staying covid-safe

@violetblue.bsky.social has compiled a very extensive and informative list of questions, answers and links about COVID. She constantly updates this list making it a good bookmark to return to. Thank you Violet.

Share it with anyone who needs it.
No one is safe until all of us are safe.

Take me to the list

Cheat sheet for doctors and nurses and to leave in waiting rooms

About COVID-19 Resources Canada

COVID-19 Resources Canada is an online national platform where we can join efforts to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada.

We collect videos, infographics and written explainers developed for non-scientists, plus resources with more scientific detail. Feel free to learn from them yourself, or to share them with those around you.

Follow this direct link to the Canadian Hazard COVID-19 Index which is regularly updated with data for Canada and for individual provinces.

Other Site Links