The End of the Pandemic Is Now in Sight
A year of scientific uncertainty is over. Two vaccines look like they will work, and more should follow.
A year of scientific uncertainty is over. Two vaccines look like they will work, and more should follow.
Because you should.
“We are on an absolutely catastrophic path,” said a COVID-19 doctor at America’s best-prepared hospital.
The risk of catching the coronavirus is much higher indoors.
For the first time, the U.S. recorded 1 million COVID-19 cases in one week.
Some experts think that at-home testing can stop coronavirus outbreaks, and that the government should have been doing more to produce the tests.
A slight exposure to the coronavirus isn’t likely to lead to lasting protection. At least not yet.
Prenatal testing is changing who gets born and who doesn’t. This is just the beginning.
Twenty-two percent of American hospitals don’t have enough workers right now.
Don’t spend time indoors with people outside your household.
This is a moment for creativity.
A devastating surge is here. Unless Americans act aggressively, it will get much larger, very quickly.
The lead principal investigator of the Pfizer vaccine trial explains the news that it’s 90 percent effective.
More people than ever are hospitalized with COVID-19. Health-care workers can’t go on like this.
The Trump administration spurred development of a vaccine; the Biden administration has to persuade Americans to take it.
The president convinced many voters that his response to the pandemic was not a disaster. The psychology of medical fraud is simple, timeless, and tragic.
The country recorded more than 100,000 coronavirus cases on Wednesday—the highest single-day total since the pandemic began.
As the coronavirus spreads uncontrolled across the U.S., the president has gone from downplaying the pandemic to COVID denial.
The longer we can prevent infections, the better prepared we will be to treat them.
More than 80 percent of Republicans think the president is doing a great job with the pandemic. Here’s why.
If Donald Trump is reelected, he will continue to downplay the threat of the coronavirus, and more Americans will fall ill.