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Thursday is the deadline for many health care workers to get the first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine shot or face the possibility of termination.
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Cleveland Clinic plans to comply with the national health care employee COVID-19 vaccination mandate after the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the requirement Thursday, officials said.
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Ohio was the leader of the 27 Republican-run states that opposed the mandate and brought it to the high court.
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There are now 12 COVID-19 drive-thru testing sites operating Ohio, including in Canton; the state says its shipment of COVID-19 testing kits has been delayed due to the high demand; Akron Children’s Hospital is placing an undisclosed number of employees who haven’t received COVID-19 vaccines on unpaid leave; and more stories.
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Bibb calls the estimated vaccination rate of Clevelanders at 45 percent "not good enough."
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Guard members deployed to hospitals overwhelmed by COVID can't go to those health care facilities unless they get shots against the virus.
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It's been another tough year for the state as more Ohioans have died from COVID-19 this year than in 2020.
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Updated: 5:14 p.m., Thursday, Dec. 2, 2021 Cleveland Clinic and University Hospitals have reversed their employee COVID-19 vaccination mandates and will allow unvaccinated caregivers to keep their jobs after the federal order was blocked earlier this week by the courts, officials said in statements Thursday.
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Numbers from the Ohio Dept. of Health show a big difference between unvaccinated and vaccinated Ohioans when it comes to hospitalization and deaths