
Daylina Miller
Health News Florida ReporterDaylina Miller is a multimedia reporter for WUSF and Health News Florida, covering health in the Tampa Bay area and across the state.
She began her journalism career as a teen columnist at The Tampa Tribune in 2005, and has since worked as a reporter for several Tampa Bay news organizations.
Daylina is a graduate of the University of South Florida's School of Mass Communications, where she started the school's Her Campus Magazine branch, served as a correspondent for USA Today College and wrote opinion columns for The Oracle, the Tampa campus newspaper.
She received her master's degree in New Media Journalism at Full Sail University and through the program started Dames & Dice, a tabletop gaming blog.
-
FEMA says some people are not showing up to appointments, and there's still plenty of availability in the system for others to sign up.
-
In Tuesday's report from the state, hospitalizations with a primary diagnosis of COVID-19 fell by 22 to 3,310.
-
While the alliance represents about 10% of all hospitals in the state, they see more than half of Florida's Medicaid patients.
-
People refusing to cooperate with contact tracing; young, asymptomatic people not getting tested; and logistical challenges of tracking COVID-19 likely led to Super Bowl-linked cases being underreported.
-
His announcement comes after CVS Pharmacy said it would follow President Joe Biden's less restrictive directive to vaccinate school employees regardless of age.
-
The number of people testing positive reported Tuesday is more than four times higher than Monday's number.
-
Overall, new coronavirus cases have been steadily declining, although the state reported a slight uptick Tuesday compared to Monday.
-
Common reported side effects of the COVID-19 vaccine have been body aches, nausea, chills and headaches. But one side effect could be mistaken as a possible sign of cancer.
-
Researchers used data from the swine flu crisis and applied the same modeling to the coronavirus pandemic to determine drive-thru clinics are the best way to approach vaccination.
-
The spike in daily new cases comes amid an overall 17% decrease from the week prior.