An Ohio Inspector General investigation found that two intermittent ODJFS employees improperly released over $300,000 COVID-19 unemployment benefits.
Acton, 58, a physician and public health expert who stood alongside Republican Gov. Mike DeWine for months during his daily coronavirus briefings, said people still stop her in the grocery store or at a restaurant to share their struggles — and she doesn’t want to look away.
Former Ohio Department of Health Director Dr. Amy Acton, who gained notoriety during the COVID pandemic, is running for governor in 2026.
As a whole, the country has seen employment increase 3.6% since the pandemic, Fed researchers found. Metro areas did a little better, with an average employment growth of 3.8%, and midsize metro areas with populations of between 500,000 and 1 million people saw growth of 5%.
She was arguably the best-known non-elected official in Ohio when the pandemic took over our lives. Now, Dr. Amy Acton is looking to use that name recognition to mount her first run for office.
People with immune system health problems continue to take precautions against COVID-19 five years into the pandemic.
A new study named Ohio as one of the states that has seen the biggest improvements in road safety since the COVID-19 pandemic. Personal injury lawyers at North Carolina-based Whitley Law Firm ...
An Ohio Inspector General investigation found ... to handle the sharp increase in the number of claims during the COVID-19 pandemic after eligibility requirements loosened. The investigation ...
Former Ohio Department of Health Director Dr. Amy Acton, who became a household name in the state in the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, is running for governor. Acton, 58, a physician and ...
A new study named Ohio as one of the states that has seen the biggest improvements in road safety since the COVID-19 pandemic.
The state provides a baseline of funding, but not enough to meet those larger areas of need, DiMauro contends.
These people miss the empathy they felt during the early days of the pandemic. Some have lost friendships, but they strive to maintain the social ties important to mental health.