Showing results for: Coronavirus - Covid 19 (page 19)
This plague next time: Public health scholar Nicholas Christakis on the pandemic’s harsh lessons
Chauncey DeVega
"We should be ashamed as a nation," says Yale scholar. And COVID wasn't the worst-case scenario by a long shot
Joe Biden, a father’s love and the legacy of “daddy issues” among presidents
Chris Lamb
Biden’s relationship with his father contrasts with perhaps every president in the last four decades
Scientists hope mRNA vaccine technology could be used to cure cancer and HIV
Zoe Sadozai Malik
The tech used in major COVID-19 vaccines is regarded as a "breakthrough." HIV vaccines could now be in the cards
Mobile vaccine clinics have made vaccines more accessible — and could be the future of public health
Nicole Karlis
Roving vaccine clinics on wheels, delivering other vaccines beyond COVID-19, could be commonplace in the future
“In the Heights” celebrates the resilience Washington Heights has used to fight the pandemic
Robert W. Snyder
The diverse neighborhood has faced down the COVID-19 and gentrification through solidarity and activism
What would America be like if Trump’s coup had succeeded? Suppressing SNL is only the start
Chauncey DeVega
It's ludicrous that Donald Trump thought he could crack down on Jimmy Kimmel's jokes. But it's really not funny
Televangelist Jim Bakker ordered to pay $150K for hawking fake COVID-19 “cure”
Zachary Petrizzo
Others, like the conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, still haven't been punished for selling similar products
How I enjoyed eating when I lost my sense of smell and taste
Drew Aichele
As a result of COVID, I went almost two months without any sense of taste or smell whatsoever
Is Rand Paul mixing up the vaccine message for COVID survivors?
Victoria Knight
A look at the evidence behind Paul’s claims seems to be in order
GOP threatens to shut down Tennessee Department of Health for “pushing vaccines on children”
Alex Henderson
"It looks like there is . . . an agenda here to have children vaccinated with or without parental consent"
Some states are mandating digital vaccine “passports” — while other states are banning them outright
Nicole Karlis
California releases a "vaccine verification program"; Idaho bans government entities from requiring such a thing
The COVID-19 pseudoscience suffocating Brazil
Shanna Hanbury, Kiratiana Freelon
How a cocktail of unproven drugs became Brazil’s main Covid-19 strategy while cases and deaths soared
For toddlers, pandemic shapes development during formative years
Leah Gullet
Normal toddler behavior like touching and playing became suddenly unsafe. Kids suffered psychologically for it
Being vaccinated doesn’t mean you must go maskless. Here’s why.
Bernard J. WolfsonThe media is being duped by Republicans on the “lab leak” theory
Amanda Marcotte
New reporting underscores how little evidence there is for the GOP-preferred story about COVID-19's origins
Boeing tested air purifiers like those widely used in schools. It decided not to use them in planes
Christina Jewett, Lauren Weber
The controversy is getting the attention of school officials from coast to coast
Ex-Trump official battled colleagues to stop diplomatic crisis over “embarrassing” COVID-19 claim
Bob Brigham
Trump allies wanted to accuse China of deliberately releasing COVID-19. One official stopped it from happening
A century after the Tulsa race massacre, a grocery store opens to serve the community
Kristi Eaton
Oasis Fresh Market is a result of many hands working to address food access in a long-overlooked neighborhood
A vaccinated person’s guide to the most concerning COVID-19 strains
Nicole Karlis
Are all the vaccines equally effective against the variants of concern? We dug into the data
Rep. Ron Johnson suspended from YouTube for promoting Hydroxychloroquine
Sky Palma
Johnson, who has a history of promoting debunked medical advice, was suspended from YouTube for seven days
“I had to be all things for my husband”: Meet the caregivers whose lives were upended by COVID
Nicole Karlis
A shadow workforce of informal caregivers swelled during the pandemic, turning family members into unpaid helpers
Anger in Tokyo over the Summer Olympics is the latest example of how unpopular hosting has become
Mark Wilson
Even when there's no pandemic underway, the local economy may take a hit
The USDA has discriminated against Black farmers for years. Can this legislation bring about change?
Ashlie D. Stevens
The average eligible Black farmer receives less than half the USDA subsidies of an eligible white farmer
Page: 19