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Babyface Reflects On ‘Nonstop’ Battle With COVID-19: It ‘Just Kept Hanging Around’

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Babyface has prevailed in his battle against COVID-19, but it wasn’t easy. The singer-songwriter, real name Kenny Edmonds, caught up with CBS on Friday to talk about his bout with the novel coronavirus.

RELATED: Teddy Riley Dishes On IG Live Battle With Babyface “It was just a sore throat at first, so I thought that’s all it was gonna be,” Babyface explained. “That evening it turned into a fever, it turned into sweats, body aches and the whole bit.

It lasted for about five, six days, and the fever just nonstop.” “Even after five, six days, the fever would come back a little bit.

So you thought you were out of it, but it kind of just kept hanging around,” he continued. “The biggest thing is you worry about if it’s going to go to the next

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Toronto to pivot COVID-19 vaccine strategy, focus on ‘hyper-local’ approach - globalnews.ca
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Toronto to pivot COVID-19 vaccine strategy, focus on ‘hyper-local’ approach
Toronto says it is shifting its COVID-19 vaccination resources and will be focusing on a “hyper-local” and “equity-focused” approach.In a press release Wednesday afternoon, the city said its crews along with Toronto Public Health (TPH) will be “shifting the city-wide COVID-19 vaccination approach to increase localized vaccination opportunities, outreach and efforts, as case counts and hospitalizations continue to decline.”The release said the city and TPH will shift resources to a “hyper-local, equity-focused campaign” and “continue to increase vaccination opportunities in focused communities with low vaccine uptake.” Ontario COVID numbers — 1,106 people in hospital, 319 in intensive care “While significant progress has been made across the city and in certain age groups, disparity in vaccine uptake remains as some communities continue to experience hesitancy and barriers to vaccination,” the release reads.The city said TPH will be bringing mobile clinics to 30 priority neighbourhoods that were identified through an analysis of “local, neighborhood-level data.”Mobile clinics will be brought to the following neighbourhoods:As part of this next phase of our vaccination efforts, #TeamToronto is shifting resources to a hyper-local, equity-focused campaign in communities with low vaccine uptake.@TOPublicHealth is bringing mobile clinics to 30 priority neighbourhoods, identified by local data.
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