When infections such as COVID go global, what chance do we have of ridding the world of the pathogen responsible?| Scientific American
After Pearl Harbor, 9/11 and other major tragedies, the U.S. has examined itself to see how to prevent the next catastrophe. We need to do the same for the COVID pandemic| Scientific American
The declaration was made because of the risk the virus poses to countries outside China, where limited person-to-person spread has occurred| Scientific American
Historians of the 1918 influenza pandemic discuss lessons for what the future of COVID might look like| Scientific American
Here’s how to plan COVID-safer holiday get-togethers, using websites that show viral levels in wastewater| Scientific American
COVID has jostled people’s emotional equilibrium. Therapy apps, telehealth, lay counselors and psilocybin are poised to change the foundations of caregiving| Scientific American
Measures meant to tame the coronavirus pandemic are quashing influenza and most other respiratory diseases, which could have wide-ranging implications| Scientific American
Assigning a cause of death is never straightforward, but data on excess deaths suggest coronavirus death tolls are likely an underestimate| Scientific American
When the U.S.’s national public health emergency for COVID expires on May 11, some costs will shift to the private sector and consumers| Scientific American
The rapid spread of new variants such as Omicron offers clues to how SARS-CoV-2 is adapting and how the pandemic will play out over the next several months| Scientific American
A social psychologist found that showing people how manipulative techniques work can create resilience against misinformation| Scientific American
We each have more power to be a science communicator than we realize| Scientific American
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