Artwork stating 'Education Destroys Barriers', 'We Demand Treatment', and 'I Need A Chance'

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  • Face au Covid, l'efficacité des réseaux autogérés de soignants, plus réactifs que le gouvernement

    Organisés en collectifs formels et informels, des "soignants de ville" ont tout fait pour réduire l’afflux de patients vers l’hôpital en pleine crise sanitaire et ont, eux aussi, sauvé des vies. Les soignants du 20ème arrondissement de Paris estiment à une centaine le nombre de morts évitées par leur auto-organisation pendant la première vague de l’épidémie.

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  • Covid-19 : le Pays basque inaugure un hôpital mobile conçu pour les gestions de crise

    À Bayonne, un camion-hôpital capable d’accueillir 18 personnes en un temps record a été mis en service. Il soulage les urgences de l’hôpital, saturées par les patients atteints par le Covid-19.

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  • How Africa Is Leading the World in Corona Response

    Many countries in Africa have been able to contain the spread of COVID-19 due to lessons learned from fighting the Ebola epidemic. Although not all African countries have implemented successful strategies, those that have seen success credit strong government leadership, community compliance, and a physically healthy population.

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  • Who's leading Covid-19 outreach among the homeless? The homeless themselves.

    In the Tenderloin district of San Francisco, local community members are leading the effort to reach out to those experiencing homelessness during the coronavirus pandemic. This effort has been successful in coordinating and distributing testing that is accessible to the population. As the director of the UCSF Center for Vulnerable Populations explains, “any public health response that does not center the voices of people who have lived the experience of homelessness is going to come up with the wrong solution.”

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  • Rural Black Women Turn To Each Other, Mutual Aid And Activism To Survive COVID-19

    Across Mississippi and Georgia, mutual aid groups have formed and existing groups have expanded to address increased racial inequities in the health care system during the coronavirus pandemic. Several of the groups are specifically focusing on food insecurity and access to basic needs, while others are raising money for personal protective equipment.

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  • Covid Superspreader Risk Is Linked to Restaurants, Gyms, Hotels

    Data from mobile phones was used to create infection models that present how COVID-19 is spreading. Researchers plotted where people went, where they were coming from, how crowded those places were, and how long they stayed there alongside the number of cases in those neighborhoods to show that the three most common places of catching the virus are restaurants, gyms, and hotels. The research can inform public policy decisions to keep people safe by implementing effective and limited lockdowns which can prevent the spread of the virus as well as limit the financial fallout for businesses.

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  • How the Navajo Nation helped push Democrats ahead in Arizona

    Voter outreach campaigns effectively boosted turnout among Native voters. The Rural Utah Project left informational flyers inside plastic bags at people’s doors (a Covid-19 tactical adjustment), held drive-through voter registration events, ran hotlines to assist indigenous voters, and partnered with Google to create street addresses using latitude and longitude-based plus codes. Senate candidate Mark Kelly ran ads in the Diné language to reach Navajo Nation voters. Precinct data shows 60-90% of Arizona Navajo Nation voters chose Democrats, a rate that pushed Biden and Kelly to a slim victory.

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  • Tracking incomplete grades moves students forward – with extra focus from educators

    Norfolk Public Schools had a unique approach to addressing student performance post-pandemic—giving students an incomplete instead of failing them. The move revealed racial disparities that allowed the district to respond. “Of the 12,455 incomplete grades submitted, 71% went to Black students.” The district acted on that information and gave devices to students, limited instruction to four times a week to prevent teacher burnout, and placed a bus driver at every school to send staff to communities.

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  • Nashville creates help centers to get struggling English Learners online for school

    In Nashville, school officials quickly found out that English Learner families were technologically falling behind and not logging into class. The school district decided to help families by creating 10 in-person tech hubs, where students could get more specilialized help. “By October, the hubs had seen more than 5,000 families.”

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  • School districts think outside the cafeteria to get students meals amid pandemic

    School districts in the Rio Grande area of Texas are turning to alternatives to deliver meals to students who are remote-learning. Programs like school curbside pick-up, and meals on wheels, where a bus loaded has designated stops where families can pick up meals, have emerged. One district in the area delivers up to 6,000 meals to students.

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