Bookmark this page for the latest Vermont coronavirus news, data and special programming from Vermont Public and NPR.
- Think you might have COVID? Here's what to do if you've been exposed or feel sick.
- Vermont's COVID-19 data can be found here.
- Check the level of community spread in your county.
Note: The Vermont Health Department stopped updating its COVID-19 dashboard after May 18, 2022.
Have story ideas, questions or comments? Send us a message or tweet us @vermontpublic.
The latest coronavirus coverage from Vermont Public and NPR:
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"As a senior, just coming back from COVID, the thought of turning around and going out into the world after a very rocky high school experience is a little daunting."
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New statistics from the Centers for Disease Control indicate that nearly 3,000 more fatalities occurred in Vermont between 2020 and 2023 than would have been expected in that time period if not for the pandemic. Fewer than one third of those increased deaths can be attributed to the COVID virus.
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The federal government ended the national COVID-19 public health emergency on May 11. And Vermonters will see changes in some of the insurance and health care benefits that the federal declaration established when it was put into place in January 2020.
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Host Connor Cyrus talks with Education Secretary Dan French during his last days on the job.
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Vermont’s pandemic death toll is larger than previously reported. The Health Department announced on Friday it found an additional 86 COVID-19 fatalities, some of which date back to April 2020.
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As the holiday approaches, infectious disease specialists are bracing for the possibility that big family get-togethers and travel will propel the spread of RSV, flu and COVID-19.
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To date, 16% of eligible Vermonters over the age of 12 have gotten the new COVID-19 booster vaccine. That's compared to just 4% nationally.
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The U.S. should prepare for a spike in COVID cases this winter as more people gather indoors and infections already begin to rise in Europe, White House COVID-19 Response Coordinator Ashish Jha says.
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Host Mikaela Lefrak speaks with Vermonters affected by the end of VERAP, the emergency rental assistance program, and advocates trying to keep them housed.
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Host Connor Cyrus talks with Dartmouth researcher Anne Sosin about current COVID-19 policies.