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13 Mar, 8 tweets, 4 min read
The vaccine rollout has been anything but simple in the US. Getting one is tricky, and how to do it varies widely by where you live.

To help, we've put together a list of tips so you can figure out when you’re eligible, where to go, and what to expect: wired.trib.al/VNumCrz
Your place in the vaccine line is determined by state by state. To get an exact idea of where to stand in the queue, you’ll need to check your state’s guidelines. If you want a rough idea, check out these CDC-issued guidelines: wired.trib.al/KwpEO6K
Right now, there's no federal or nationally centralized list onto which you sign up for a vaccine. Each state, territory, and freely associated state has sign-up info on their health department websites.

You can find a list of those sites here: wired.trib.al/10k0GVt
When you’re ready to get the shot, @VaccineFinder is a great way to locate available vaccines near you. Other resources to check out include doctor's offices, hospitals, CVS, Walgreens, and other pharmacies. This health dept. site is another option: wired.trib.al/qmmFNpJ
First, make sure vaccines are covered by your insurance provider. When visiting private practices and retailers, bring your ID and health insurance card. If you go to a government site, you probably don't need your insurance info, but they might require proof of state residency.
After your shot, you should sit for 15 minutes to ensure you don't have a severe reaction. You’ll receive a card that lists the vaccine type and the date (keep it). Next, sign up for V-safe, the CDC's vaccine checker. It will ask you Qs and tell you when to get your second dose.
If you’re not eligible yet, show up towards the end of the day and ask the facility if there are any leftover doses. Few providers advertise it, but if they have one, they'd rather give it to you than throw it away.

For more in-depth advice, go here: wired.trib.al/AhzwRGt
Want to support more journalism like this? Subscribe to WIRED for just $5 a year and get full access to our website and magazine wired.trib.al/22iGNyC

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More from @WIRED

12 Mar
As people around the world are getting vaccinated against Covid-19, we have Dr. Özlem Türeci to thank. Not only is she the co-founder of BioNTech, but she is also half of the team that designed the first Covid-19 vaccine, with Pzifer, in under a year. 1/

Art: Sam Whitney
Dr. Türeci has had quite an accomplished career. As a physician, scientist, and entrepreneur she has founded multiple biotech companies and, along with her partner and husband, became the first Turkish Germans among Germany's top 100 wealthiest people list in 2020. 2/
She earned her doctorate from Saarland University in Homburg, Germany in the 1990s, where she also met her husband, Dr. Uğur Şahin. 3/
Read 8 tweets
10 Mar
.@DollyParton has always been more than what she appears. While some may see her as just an entertainer, she's actually a business-savvy multi-millionaire, who has found subtle ways to advocate for culture change throughout her 60-year career. 1/

Art: Sam Whitney
Dolly, an early investor into Covid-19 vaccine research, is one of our Women's History Month honorees.
Since the start of her career in 1959, she has disarmed people by allowing them to think her humble-upbringing and lack of formal education made her less than smart. 2/
But she's made strategic use of her 'trashy' bleached blonde look to gain a public platform for clearly feminist songs like 'Just Because I'm A Woman.' 3/
Read 10 tweets
10 Mar
For most organisms, decapitation is a harsh conclusion to life. Not for this sea slug. The creature separated its head from its body—and then dragged itself around to feed.

So, uh, how and why? Here are science’s best guesses 1/ wired.trib.al/wBg129U
This kind of body-splitting is known as autotomy—lizards, for instance, shed their tails to escape predation. Unlike lizards, though, this doesn’t appear to be a defensive strategy. And what the sacoglossan sea slug does next puts it in a class of its own 2/
A day after self-decapitation, the slug’s neck wound closes. After a week, it regenerates a heart. In less than a month, the whole body has grown back, and the disembodied slug is embodied once more 3/
Read 9 tweets
8 Mar
Covid-19 is more than a healthcare crisis. It's proving to be an existential crisis for working women in particular. In 2020, for the first time ever, there were more women in the workforce than men. Then the pandemic struck. 1/

#InternationalWomensDay
Art Credit: Sam Whitney Image
Lockdowns, remote work, virtual school, and the day-to-day responsibilities of managing a household proved to be too much. Now, more women are leaving their jobs to care for children or aging parents and sometimes both. 2/

#IWD2021
#InternationalWomensDay
This shift is so monumental that the number of women in the workforce is expected to at least temporarily drop to late-1980s levels. That effectively erases all the gains made in the last 30 years. 3/

#IWD2021
#InternationalWomensDay
Read 6 tweets
7 Mar
In 2014, 276 school girls were kidnapped in Nigeria by the terrorist group Boko Haram the night before their finals.

A lawyer with less than 100 followers tweeted about it with the hashtag #BringBackOurGirls, and a movement began:
wired.com/story/bring-ba… 1/
From there it exploded, with celebrities ranging from Alyssa Milano and Mary J. Blige to Hillary Clinton and Common leveraging large followings to call attention to the issue.

All the way until it landed on President Barack Obama’s desk. 2/
The online critical mass forced the White House staff to debate deploying more than $250 million in sophisticated military might to look for teenagers held by a group that had never attacked the US, on a mission essentially ordered up by Twitter. 3/
Read 5 tweets
7 Mar
For the past six weeks, we’ve been releasing excerpts from ‘2034,’ a novel by @stavridisj and @elliotackerman. The book is a supremely well-informed look at a potential war between the US and China.

Let’s hope things never come to that 1/ wired.trib.al/gjJxE9o
It starts in the South China Sea, when a US warship comes upon a distressed fishing trawler. The two countries are already on the verge of war, and what happens next nearly pushes them over the edge 2/ wired.trib.al/yr6Djg0
The proceeding events are dizzying. A blackout, a sunk destroyer, a lost F-35—the US won’t understand, or at least not until it is too late, what China is up to 3/ wired.trib.al/pXmHXSX
Read 9 tweets

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