
Alexandra B Hogan
Articles
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1 month ago |
medrxiv.org | Alexandra B Hogan |David J Muscatello |Bette Liu |Gemma L. Nedjati-Gilani
ABH has previously received funding from the World Health Organization (both paid to the institution and individually) for work relating to modelling pandemic-era COVID-19 vaccine impact. BL declares grants paid to their institution from the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council and Medical Research Future Fund. ABH and DJM are supported by a National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Investigator Grants (APP2009278, APP1194109).
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Dec 23, 2024 |
7news.com.au | James H Wood |Alexandra B Hogan
This article first appeared in The Conversation. As the holiday season approaches, COVID cases are rising again in Australia, particularly in Victoria and Tasmania. This is now the fourth year running with a summer rise of COVID, and the second year with a roughly six-month gap between waves. Know the news with the 7NEWS app: Download today Will we see a wave every six months from now on? And what can we expect from COVID this Christmas?
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Dec 19, 2024 |
openforum.com.au | Alexandra B Hogan
As the holiday season approaches, COVID cases are rising again in Australia, particularly in Victoria and Tasmania. This is now the fourth year running with a summer rise of COVID, and the second year with a roughly six-month gap between waves. Will we see a wave every six months from now on? And what can we expect from COVID this Christmas?
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Dec 12, 2024 |
theconversation.com | Alexandra B Hogan |UNSW Sydney
As the holiday season approaches, COVID cases are rising again in Australia, particularly in Victoria and Tasmania. This is now the fourth year running with a summer rise of COVID, and the second year with a roughly six-month gap between waves. Will we see a wave every six months from now on? And what can we expect from COVID this Christmas?
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May 18, 2024 |
scroll.in | Meru Sheel |Alexandra B Hogan
We know vaccines have been a miracle for public health. Now, new research led by the World Health Organization has found vaccines have saved an estimated 154 million lives in the past 50 years from 14 different diseases. Most of these have been children under five, and around two-thirds children under one year old.
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