Grzegorz Michalowski/EPA/Poland Out
As cities, galleries and tourist destinations shut down across the world, news photographers are showing us our world anew.
Michael Nelson’s Tjakamarra’s Five Stories, which sold for A$687,877 at Sothebys in London in 2016.
SOTHEBY'S LONDON
In some communities, art sales account for 15% of Indigenous income. They are vanishing with the coronavirus, making conditions worse.
AAP/Lukas Coch
Governments have been keen on investing in defence and national security, less so in human security. The current crises show it’s time that changed.
With schools closed, parents such as Jennifer Green, left, and Lisa Spalding, right, must stay at home with their children.
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Confused about how the new law affects you? You’re not alone. An employment law scholar explains the ins and outs.
South Korean is one of the most surveilled countries in the world.
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South Korea’s COVID-19 testing programme relies on what many would call privacy invasions.
MOHAMED HOSSAM/EPA
Travel bans, social distancing and testing can all be effective against COVID-19.
Ibuprofen is a common anti-inflammatory medicine.
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There is currently no evidence showing it makes COVID-19 symptoms worse.
Up to a third of UK adults have high blood pressure.
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How Ace inhibitors work to lower blood pressure.
A highway exchange stands empty of traffic after the government implemented restrictions to prevent the spread of the new coronavirus in Lima, Peru, on March 18, 2020. Does the global response to COVID-19 suggest there’s hope for climate action?
AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd
The policy response to COVID-19 has been dramatic, unlike the response to climate change, for several reasons. But it shows there’s hope for real action on climate change.
The normally bustling Galata Bridge in Istanbul, Turkey, is empty. March 19 2020.
EPA-EFE/TOLGA BOZOGLU
And why COVID-19 has launched a response that the climate crisis couldn’t.
A Mediterranean diet is good for your gut health.
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Your gut plays an important role in building your immune defences. Don’t neglect it.
Parked school buses in Freeport, New York, 18 March 2020. Justin Lane/EPA-EFE
Coronavirus may fundamentally reshape some areas of how we life our lives.
What lecturers and students can do in the absence of the bricks-and-mortar lecturing experience.
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Steps higher education institutions can take to ensure that teaching and learning continues during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Commuters outside Nairobi Railway Station wash their hands before entering the train station as a preventive measure against COVID-19.
Photo by Dennis Sigwe/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images
Health literacy is the degree to which people can get, understand and use basic health information to make decisions about health issues.
FamVeld
People of all ages need to work together to help keep society functional.
Touching one’s face is natural, but it spreads germs. There are ways to stop.
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Studies have shown that some people touch their faces as often as 23 times an hour. Some studies have also shown that face-touching spreads germs, such as the coronavirus. Here are some ways to stop.
Washing your hands frequently is just one of the things you can do to stay healthy during the coronavirus outbreak.
Getty Images / Jena Ardell
There are plenty of ways to keep your mind and body active and healthy during the outbreak.
A nursing home resident who tested positive for the virus visits through the window with her daughter.
AP Photo/Ted S. Warren
Different demographics are more or less vulnerable to serious complications from the coronavirus. A virologist explains the aging-related changes in how immune systems work that are to blame.
Using tech together with their parents is better for children.
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There are ways to use tech to help kids learn, explore their interests and get creative.
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Many households struggle when schools are closed.