Now going into its third month for many Las Vegas stay-at-home workers, the COVID-19 pandemic may have brought on another potential health issue — controlling food cravings.
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A woman was involved in a verbal altercation Friday night aboard a Las Vegas-bound Frontier Airlines flight from Florida, a McCarran International Airport official confirmed.
Virtual concert series benefits Meals on Wheels; local nonprofits receive donations of women’s hygiene products.
Las Vegas health officials say vaccinations dropped sharply in March, April; they stress that it’s riskier to put off kids’ shots than to take them to doctors’ offices.
Some countries are announcing quarantine requirements for visitors, limiting movements for a duration of time upon arrival. Many of these restrictions will be only temporary, but there is no clear indication of when they will relax.
If you can’t come to an agreement about a credit card charge, there’s another option: Contact your credit card company to serve as the mediator between you and the business you believe incorrectly charged you.
Over the last few years, however, a so-called “gig economy” has emerged. These jobs involve workers making a living via contract work. With millions more on the unemployment rolls, these work-from-home jobs could see increased interest.
The 12 new cases was the lowest overnight increase reported since the early days of the outbreak of the disease in Nevada. State numbers also were well below average.
Though you may be tempted to panic-buy supplies and stock up on other items to prevent or “treat” the coronavirus, there are many things that are simply not worth your money.
The daughter of Angelica Rodriguez, a 62-year-old great-grandmother and medical worker, is raising money to offset the cost of Rodriguez’s lengthy hospitalization due to COVID-19.
Barbershops and hair salons may reopen Saturday as part of Phase One of Gov. Steve Sisolak’s plan to reopen the state.
If it’s been a while since you’ve moved your car, you might be faced with these expenses when it’s time to hit the road again.
The coronavirus pandemic has brought changes to the industry, whose mission is to be present for families in their time of need.
Here’s how some people are rising to the challenge of making ends meet during the COVID-19 pandemic.
There may never have been another point — at least in our lifetimes — when the work, sacrifices and impact of nurses, and other health care workers, were more obvious to so many people.