UK opposition leader, Keir Starmer, with a government graph showing an international comparison of COVID-19 death tolls.
UK Parliament/Jessica Taylor/PA Wire/PA Images
The COVID-19 pandemic is interrupting scientific field work across North America, leaving blank spots in important data sets and making it harder to track ecological change.
Work and family, without good childcare, are mutually exclusive.
Getty/Malte Mueller
A scholar and mother of a young child who is now working at home explores what’s called the ‘work-family conflict’ – and finds that’s the wrong label for the impossible choices faced by parents.
OxyContin is an opioid prescribed for pain relief. But some users become addicted.
Getty Images / Marie Hickman
The crisis has made recovery more difficult for those with substance use disorders. The inability to get to support group meetings, stress and illness are just some of the factors.
Masks and social distancing can help protect shoppers from the coronavirus, but gloves aren’t recommended.
Mario Tama/Getty Images
Should I wear a mask and gloves in the grocery story? Sanitize my food? A food virologist takes on the top questions people are asking as they shop for food amid the coronavirus pandemic.
The crisis has forced many businesses to close, prompting a spike in unemployment claims.
AP Photo/Rick Bowmer
It’s early days yet but a growing body of research evidence suggests COVID-19 causes abnormalities in blood clotting, which means blood thinning drugs may have a role to play in treatment.
After a disastrous performance during the summer’s bushfires, Morrison has been a stronger leader on the global health crisis. But another great challenge – the economic one – is still ahead.
Do recent lockdown protests indicate that Australia is on the path to Trump’s America? While we can currently rest easy, the problem requires careful consideration.
Honorary Enterprise Professor, School of Population and Global Health, and Department of General Practice and Primary Care, The University of Melbourne