Denmark has seen a rise in cases in nursing homes; UK vaccines watchdog says not enough evidence to roll out Covid jabs to 12- to 15-year-olds; North Korea’s Kim Jong-un has ordered officials to fight Covid in ‘our style’
- Kim Jong-un rejects Covax vaccine offer as North Korea fights pandemic in ‘our style’
- New Zealand Covid update: new cases drop to 28 but ‘job is not done’, deputy PM warns
- ‘Concerned’ intensive care doctors warn Australia faces surge demand in coming months
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With companies increasingly recognising that pandemic-induced burnout is a pressing issue that needs to be addressed, what are the signs and what can frazzled workers do to help recovery?
My colleague Alexandra Topping has been speaking to Dr Rajvinder Samra, a psychologist and lecturer in health at the Open University, who describes burnout as “the effects of chronic and acute stress over long periods of time”.
Related: What are the telltale signs of Covid burnout?
In the United States, president Joe Biden has said he will set out his administration’s next steps to combat the coronavirus Delta variant next week.
He also called the US economic recovery “durable and strong”