Showing results for: Coronavirus - Covid 19 (page 31)
In fast-moving pandemic, health officials try to change minds at warp speed
Katheryn Houghton
Public health laws typically come long after social norms shift — officials don't have time for that now
A crush of patients, dwindling supplies and the nurse who lost hope
J. David McSwane2020 was a record year for far right violence in the U.S.
Spencer Sunshine
There were a large number of far right killings and car attacks at Black Lives Matter demonstrations in 2020
“Those of us who don’t die are going to quit”: Overwhelmed hospitals and the nurse who lost hope
J. David McSwane
Supply shortages remain so severe that nurse Kristen Cline reuses her N95 for shifts as her hospital buckles
In a last-minute rule change, the Trump admin rolls back water-saving standards for showerheads
Robert Glennon
The Trump administration is rolling back a regulation that requires showerheads to conserve water
New year, higher minimum wages in 24 states and 50 municipalities thanks to Fight for $15
Kenny Stancil
"Despite the pandemic, the Fight for $15 movement continues to gain strength"
Looking ahead: The top food and agriculture stories for 2021
FoodPrint
One thing we know for certain about the coming year? The coronavirus pandemic is far from over
What does a vaccine factory actually look like?
Matthew Rozsa
How do you mass-produce something microscopic? Here's what happens inside a vaccine production facility
Trump is a historic loser: No other one-term president has refused to leave office
Matthew Rozsa
10 other sitting presidents have been spurned by the American people, but none have behaved as badly as Trump
Calling COVID-19 crisis a “wake-up call,” WHO experts warn next pandemic could be even worse
Jake Johnson
The "next pandemic may be more severe" if the international community does not learn from the COVID-19 crisis
More than 2,900 health care workers died this year — and the government barely kept track
Christina Jewett, Robert Lewis, Melissa Bailey
Many of the deaths — about 680 — occurred in New York and New Jersey, which were hit hard early in the pandemic
Congress passes a half-assed COVID relief bill
Terry H. Schwadron
But senators and representatives will be patting themselves on their backs anyway
Hero pay for hero workers?
Mark Kreidler
Grocery store owners are making huge profits — frontline employees, not so much
Democrats immediately reject Trump’s coronavirus relief demands, push for higher stimulus checks
Igor Derysh
Trump won’t get anything he demanded — but his delay still cost millions of laid-off workers critical aid
Pandemic lessons for the rest of us
Liz Theoharis
Or vaccine thinking applied to all of American life
How socialism made the COVID-19 vaccines possible
Alex Henderson
The COVID-19 vaccines are a "triumph for capitalism" that relied heavily on "years of public-sector funding"
Ski resorts work to stay open as COVID cases snowball
Christie Aschwanden
How to stay open amid the pandemic is an issue resorts across the U.S. are facing
In COVID hot zones, firefighters now “pump more oxygen than water”
Eli Cahan
Firefighters have not been commonly counted among the ranks of front-line health care workers getting infected
With vaccine delivery imminent, nursing homes must make a strong pitch to residents
Judith Graham
Conflicts are likely to arise as COVID vaccines are rolled out to long-term care facilities across the country
Why vaccine hesitancy could be a bigger problem than expected
Matthew Rozsa
Salon reached out to experts on what we should expect after the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines are distributed
Many U.S. health experts underestimated the coronavirus — until it was too late
Liz Szabo
Many leading infectious disease specialists underestimated the fast-moving outbreak in its first weeks and months
What If, after 9/11, George W. Bush had just thrown a bunch of parties?
Tom Engelhardt
And what if, after the pandemic hit America, Donald J. Trump had launched a global war against COVID-19?
Best of 2020: Marriage in the time of coronavirus
Jeannine Hall Gailey
Our 2020 retrospective continues with this essay set in Seattle’s first outbreak, in the early days of the pandemic
How the coronavirus ended up in Antarctica
Nicole Karlis
The novel coronavirus has now infected every continent on Earth
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