Workers who have been battling COVID-19 on Quebec's front lines for almost a year say they have been facing challenges in getting their first doses of the vaccine.
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A pilot project is testing out a Czech Republic-made "igloo" as a way to keep homeless Montrealers, wary of spending nights in shelters during the pandemic, safe and warm.
There is almost talk of a miracle when looking at the statistical anomaly of the COVID-19 pandemic in the Kanien'keha:ka (Mohawk) community of Kahnawake.
Three unions are united in denouncing the government of Quebec, which, according to them, is trying to avoid retroactively adjusting the salaries of administrative assistants in the university network under pay equity.
The COVID-19 pandemic and the curfew and lockdown that have accompanied it have increased the food needs of pregnant women and their infants, but the situation also often prevents them from getting the help they need, warn two community workers.
Quebec reported Saturday that 252,176 people have now tested positive for COVID-19 in the province and 9,437 people have died due to the disease since the start of the pandemic.
A pediatric addictions expert in Montreal is sounding the alarm about an increase in the number of teenagers referred to his clinic, who are vaping in a more harmful way during lockdown than in pre-pandemic times.
A team of researchers from the Montreal Heart Institute believes they have found an effective weapon against COVID-19: colchicine, an oral tablet already known and used for other diseases.
For the second time in less than 24 hours, Montreal police (SPVM) officers intervened on Saturday morning to put an end to two major illegal gatherings in the Outremont borough of Montreal.
No matter what year it is, fall tends to bring a slew of coughing and sneezing, but if you're feeling under the weather in 2020, it's important to know the difference between the symptoms of a cold, influenza, seasonal allergies, or the novel coronavirus.
The novel coronavirus can live on different surfaces, sometimes for several hours, after an infected person coughs or sneezes on them. CTVNews.ca takes a look at some of these surfaces and common areas, and how long the virus can live on them.