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The ’airborne virus scientist’ public health officials turn to to assess dangers from COVID-19 in the air

Tara Parker-Pope | 
[Aerosol scientist Dr. Linsey Marr’s] scientific curiosity and her multidisciplinary background have made her one of the world’s leading scientists ...
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SCOTUS ruling protecting gay and transgender rights reaffirms sea change in American attitudes, rebuffs Trump Administration policies

Adam Nagourney, Jeremy Peters | 
When Donald J. Trump was elected president, gay and lesbian leaders warned that their far-reaching victories under Barack Obama — ...
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Intriguing links between blood types and COVID-19 outcomes

Carl Zimmer | 
Why do some people infected with the coronavirus suffer only mild symptoms, while others become deathly ill? Geneticists have been ...
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Coronavirus survivors’ plasma offers ‘modest’ recovery boost for infected patients, small study suggests

Gina Kolata | 
A small study of patients who were severely ill from the coronavirus hints that treatment with antibodies from recovered patients ...
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Nationwide coronavirus antibody test in Israel to assess herd immunity and vulnerability to 2nd wave

David Halbfinger | 
Israel, whose aggressive response to the coronavirus has held its fatality rate to a fraction of those of the United ...
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Viewpoint: Anti-vax conspiracy propaganda movement aiming to derail successful rollout of coronavirus vaccines

Kevin Roose | 
This war could pit public health officials and politicians against an anti-vaccination movement that floods social media with misinformation, conspiracy ...
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How Sweden avoided a lockdown and a large coronavirus outbreak

Trust is high in Sweden — in government, institutions and fellow Swedes. When the government defied conventional wisdom and refused ...
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First we need a coronavirus vaccine—Then figure out how to produce 300 million doses

Knvul Sheikh | 
In the midst of national shortages of testing swabs and protective gear, some medical suppliers and health policy experts are ...
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‘Plandemic’ viral video gives anti-vaccination conspiracy movement a booster shot

Davey Alba | 
In a video posted to YouTube on [May 4], a woman animatedly described an unsubstantiated secret plot by global elites ...
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‘Money being made from people’s suffering’: Selling blood samples from coronavirus survivors

Some biotech companies are cashing in on the race to produce coronavirus antibody tests, taking blood samples from people who ...
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Coronavirus antibody tests: Can they return us to ‘normal’?

Apoorva Mandavilli, Katie Thomas | 
When will life return to normal, or at least a new normal? A major answer to the question of when ...
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Cytokine storms: How your own body fights against you during a coronavirus infection

Apoorva Mandavilli | 
When the body first encounters a virus or a bacterium, the immune system ramps up and begins to fight the ...
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What is it about the coronavirus genome that makes it so dangerous?

Carl Zimmer, Jonathan Corum | 
In January, scientists deciphered a piece of very bad news: the genome of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19. The ...
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Wave of coronavirus conspiracies might be ‘just as dangerous for societies as the outbreak itself’

Max Fisher | 
The coronavirus has given rise to a flood of conspiracy theories, disinformation and propaganda, eroding public trust and undermining health ...
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Italy considers a return to normal—for people with the ‘right’ coronavirus antibodies

Jason Horowitz | 
There is a growing sense in Italy that the worst may have passed. ... That glimmer of hope has turned ...
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FDA approves rapid blood test for coronavirus antibodies. Could help determine who has ‘some’ immunity.

Apoorva Mandavilli | 
The Food and Drug Administration on Thursday approved a new test for coronavirus antibodies, the first for use in the ...
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Timing ‘couldn’t have been worse’: Why travel restrictions didn’t prevent a coronavirus pandemic

Derek Watkins, James Glanz, Jin Wu, Weiyi Cai | 
The most extensive travel restrictions to stop an outbreak in human history haven’t been enough. We analyzed the movements of ...
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Matching coronavirus containment success of Taiwan and South Korea requires ‘extraordinary levels of trust and cooperation from citizens’

Donald McNeil Jr. | 
Terrifying though the coronavirus may be, it can be turned back. China, South Korea, Singapore and Taiwan have demonstrated that, ...
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Are coronavirus containment efforts more damaging ‘than the direct toll of the virus itself’?

David Katz | 
I am deeply concerned that the social, economic and public health consequences of this near total meltdown of normal life ...
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Worst case scenario for coronavirus: 200,000 to 1.7 million US deaths

Sheri Fink | 
Officials at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and epidemic experts from universities around the world conferred last ...
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After years of studying Huntington’s, pioneering researcher reveals that she has the disease

Denise Grady | 
Year after year for two decades, Nancy Wexler led medical teams into remote villages in Venezuela, where huge extended families ...
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Bizarre deep sea microbe could help explain origins of ‘animals, plants, fungi and humans’

Carl Zimmer | 
Two billion years ago, simple cells gave rise to far more complex cells. Biologists have struggled for decades to learn ...
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Teenager’s experimental gene therapy treatment could change the lives of millions of sickle cell patients worldwide

Gina Kolata, Samantha Stark | 
Meet Helen Obando, a shy 16-year-old who likes to dance when her body isn’t ravaged by the debilitating symptoms of ...
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EPA rejects New York Times’ allegation that agriculture, chemical industries ‘control’ environmental regulation

Valerie Richardson | 
The Environmental Protection Agency unloaded [Jan. 14] on the New York Times, accusing the newspaper of “extreme bias” for running ...
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We have the power to wipe out mosquitoes and malaria—but is that a good idea?

Jennifer Kahn | 
Gene drives have yet to be tested outside the lab, and even the most developed project to date — the ...
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Age isn’t the thing that saps our memories: ‘Experiencing new things is the best way to keep the mind young’

Daniel Levitin | 
Twenty-year-olds don’t think, “Oh dear, this must be early-onset Alzheimer’s.” They think, “I’ve got a lot on my plate right ...
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Does your DNA leave a unique identifying code? Not always, if you get a bone marrow transplant

Heather Murphy | 
Three months after his bone marrow transplant, Chris Long of Reno, Nev., learned that the DNA in his blood had ...
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