If the world seems to you a little nastier and more confrontational than it was just a few years ago, you're not alone. Many ...
Thankfully, in 2025, the days of lockdowns and quarantines now seem a distant memory for many—even though the physical, ...
The pandemic stretched us—our communication, our science, our distribution networks, even what it means to be a good citizen ...
The crisis in children’s school attendance since the pandemic needs to be tackled to end a generation of “lost learning” ...
Vaccines, medications and other biomedical breakthroughs are necessary to eliminate epidemic diseases. But as I explore in my ...
The shadow of the Washington Monument towers over “In America: Remember,” an art installation that features flags for every U ...
A new National Academies report recommends ways for the U.S. to reap the benefits of artificial intelligence in biotechnology ...
Epidemics, especially when a new disease emerges ... As many of us recall from the time the WHO declared COVID a pandemic, the start of a disease outbreak focuses everyone's attention on the ...
The U.S. was considered more prepared than any other country to deal with a pandemic. But when Covid arrived, multiple flaws were exposed.
More than a century ago, the US learned what happens when there is no national response to a major health crisis.
Eight scholars from Brown University looked back at the pandemic with an eye toward how its lessons can help the United States and other nations prepare for the next global health crisis.
The “quarantine fatigue” of 2020 became an ongoing “pandemic fatigue,” a complex set of emotions that continues to affect the ...