Latest on the Pandemic
MAINE COVID-19 INFORMATION
Where can I get vaccinated? Where can I get tested? What do I need to know?More on the pandemic
-
I could take time off from my job to recover without forgoing pay. Millions aren’t so fortunate.
-
The vaccine is recommended for everyone ages 6 months and older and some pharmacies are offering limited appointments for the shots.
-
While some individual schools and colleges have implemented temporary mask requirements, federal and state leaders don't appear to be considering widespread COVID-19 restrictions with the pandemic over.
-
Federal regulators approved the latest COVID-19 vaccine this week, and shots are expected to be available within days.
-
Experts worry that immunity from previous vaccinations and infections is fading in many people, and a new shot would save many lives.
-
A scathing federal report has found New Jersey's two state-run veterans homes were unprepared to keep residents safe during the COVID-19 outbreak, violating their constitutional rights to reasonable care while in state custody.
-
-
Hospitalizations remain flat for now but are expected to increase this fall and winter.
-
According to the investigation, former Sen. Andy Sanborn fraudulently obtained $844,000 in funding from the Small Business Administration between December 2021 and February 2022.
-
In many people, long COVID may actually be ‘long Lyme,’ and better diagnosis and treatment of both diseases are vital – especially in Maine, with the nation’s highest Lyme rate.
-
Latest booster shot targeting the Eris variant should be available in late September or early October.
-
Attributing an increase in cases to people moving indoors doesn’t make much sense. What does?
-
The 39 public libraries are scattered around the state and will receive $5,000 to $100,000 apiece.
-
Homeless kids often fell through the cracks during the tumult of the COVID pandemic, when many schools struggled to keep track of families with unstable housing.
-
Employees could face disciplinary action, including being fired, if they do not comply, a company memo says.
-
Based in Guilford, Puritan had become one of the top two swab manufacturers in the world, but orders have decreased dramatically as the COVID-19 pandemic has receded, forcing the company to downsize.
-
The caseload in Kennebec County courts is 67% higher than it was pre-pandemic, with 2,343 cases pending.
-
Sixty-six cases of COVID-19 have been reported since May 14 among staff and residents at St. Joseph's Rehabilitation and Residence.
-
Three judges on the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals unanimously reversed a lower court's decision to throw out a legal challenge to the state's COVID-19 mandate for health care workers.
-
While the White House has threatened to veto Republican’s debt ceiling bill, the administration has signaled a willingness to consider other budget caps.
-
With COVID-19 public health emergency ending, Maine CDC website to stop updating vaccination numbersThe state will still update COVID-19 case counts, hospitalizations and deaths.
-
The pandemic has been on a downward trend for more than a year, and most countries have returned to life before COVID-19.
-
Vaccine requirements for federal workers and federal contractors, as well as foreign air travelers to the U.S., will end May 11.
-
Masks are no longer required at MaineHealth or Northern Light Health medical facilities statewide, effectively putting an end to the emergency measure in most situations 3 years after the pandemic began.
-
The move by Maine's second largest health care network comes as the number of hospital patients with COVID-19 has dropped to the lowest level since August 2021.
-
The U.S. national emergency to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic has ended.
-
Nearly a third of all Mainers ages 5 years and older have received the omicron-targeting bivalent booster shot compared to less than 18% of individuals nationwide.
-
Sunday's announcement represents the second time Maine's governor has contracted COVID-19 within the past year.
-
Officials say the 2022 maternal death rate is on track to get close to pre-pandemic levels. But that's not great: The rate before COVID-19 was the highest it had been in decades.
-
Long after Maine's first case of coronavirus, communal activities and gatherings are reaching pre-pandemic levels again, though troubling remnants of isolation persist.
-
U.S. intelligence agencies are divided over whether a lab leak or a spillover from animals is the likely source of the deadly virus.
-
The system is still encouraging community members to get vaccinated and boosted.
-
Did COVID-19 originate in animals or leak from a Chinese lab?
-
A federal mandate for health care workers to get vaccinated against COVID-19 has been in place nationally for a year.
-
Lawmakers who negotiated the payments say they believed the pandemic-era aid would be tax-free, but a Maine Revenue Service official says no such assurance was made.
-
Hundreds of thousands of students who have dropped off public school rolls since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic are unaccounted for.
-
Even though some taxpayers already have filed, the state is one of nearly two dozen where federal officials have yet to determine whether the payments are taxable.
-
Despite objections from public health advocates, a legislative committee voted Wednesday in favor of permanently legalizing the pandemic-era practice of to-go cocktails, wine, and beer.
-
The system president says high vaccination rates in the state and improved outcomes for people who contract COVID-19 played a role in the decision.
-
Nirav Shah, director of Maine's Center for Disease Control and Prevention, will be second in command at the U.S. CDC starting next month.
-
The Biden administration had previously considered ending the emergency last year, but held off amid concerns about a potential 'winter surge' in cases.
-
The Food and Drug Administration asked its scientific advisers Thursday to help lay the groundwork for switching to once-a-year boosters for most Americans.
-
U.S. health officials want to make COVID-19 vaccinations more like the annual flu shot.
-
Hong Kong, which once had some of the world's strictest COVID-19 rules, has been easing various restrictions to revive its economy.
-
The state is one of the most vaccinated in the country, but nursing home residents are far more updated for the latest shot than those who care for them.
-
Dr. Nirav Shah, director of the Maine CDC, said a wall of immunity should help prevent the outbreaks experienced last winter.
-
A record 104,000 people missed work in October 2022 because of child care problems, surpassing early pandemic levels.
-
The U.S., Japan and some other countries are requiring travelers from China to show a negative test before allowing them to enter, and Taiwan has said it will quarantine positive cases.
-
EU health officials promise to continue talks on seeking a common approach.