What is a state’s balance of payments, and why do some pay so much more? An author of a report at the heart of debates over which states should get coronavirus relief funds breaks it down.
Smiling schoolboys reveal their missing teeth.
Anthony Asael/Art in All of Us /Contributor via Getty Images
During this unsettling time, global leaders have assured children and adults alike that the tooth fairy, free from the risk of infection, is indeed an essential worker.
A coronavirus vaccine is coming, but when?
Francesco Carta fotografo/Moment via Getty Images
Vaccine development is usually a long process. The coronavirus pandemic is forcing researchers to innovate and test potential vaccines faster than ever before.
Short walks can boost the immune system and keep a person fit.
AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth
Physical activity is important for all kinds of health reasons, even in quarantine.
People with autism spectrum disorder think differently than most people. How they face challenges is something everyone can learn from.
iStock/Getty Images Plus
Many people with autism spectrum disorder have dealt with social isolation their entire lives. Their coping strategies could help the rest of the world right now, as a professor with ASD explains.
Carbonation and flavors are all that go into most seltzers.
stockcam/E+ via Getty Images
Bubbly waters are becoming increasingly popular. While these carbonated, sometimes flavored beverages might cause slight harm to teeth, they are far better than soda. They might even be good for you.
A number of young COVID-19 patients have developed inflammation in multiple organs.
Ezra Acayan/Getty Images
A biomedical researcher and pediatrician who works with Kawasaki disease and COVID-19 explains the similarities and differences in the worrisome cases doctors are starting to see.
Lack of technology infrastructure is a barrier to mobile healthcare in Nigeria
Stefan Heunis/AFP via Getty Images
Mobile technology has great potential to improve healthcare in Nigeria but government must provide regulatory framework.
Motorists are stopped at the large-scale social restrictions monitoring post (PSBB) on the border road in Bekasi City, West Java, for polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests to detect COVID-19 infections.
Kuncoro Widyo Rumpoko/Pacific Press/Sipa USA
The US faces a high risk of hurricanes and other disasters this year that could leave thousands of people in need of shelter. COVID-19 will make those disasters more dangerous to manage.
Research shows smoking or vaping can make coronavirus illnesses worse.
krisanapong detraphiphat via Getty Images
Kalle Hirvonen, United Nations University dan Derek Headey, International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI)
Despite their popularity, there are reasons to doubt whether “home gardens” provide a sustainable and cost-effective way of addressing hidden hunger.
A health worker collecting sample test kits from a nurse during a community COVID-19 testing campaign in Lagos.
Photo by Olukayode Jaiyeola/NurPhoto via Getty Images
As Nigeria battles COVID-19, systemic corruption and a low level of accountability in the health sector may undermine efforts to halt the devastating effect of the virus.
As larger percentages of the U.S. population become infected, a study shows how direct medical expenses for treating COVID-19 will rise. Those costs will come back to everyone.
Scott Eisen/Getty Images
Reopening state economies too soon risks a second wave of the pandemic, and a surge in medical costs. Anyone who pays insurance premiums and taxes will be picking up the tab.
Testing in cells is an important and exciting first step.
elkor/E+ via Getty Images
Nevan Krogan, University of California, San Francisco
Researchers at the University of California, San Francisco, identified nine existing drugs that show promise to treat COVID-19. The proteins they target haven’t been tried before.
A black swan event must meet three criteria: it must be an outlier, must have a major impact and must be declared predictable in hindsight.
(Buiobuione/Wikimedia)
The danger of treating COVID-19 as an astronomically rare and improbable event is that we will treat it as such and fail to prepare for the next pandemic. And there will be another pandemic.
When deadly tornadoes struck the Southeast in April, residents in Prentiss, Mississippi, struggled to keep up coronavirus precautions while salvaging what they could from their damaged properties.
AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis
If the forecasts are right, the US could be facing more natural disasters this year – on top of the coronavirus pandemic. Local governments aren’t prepared.
A woman wearing a mask walks with empty cart in Guangzhou, China.
Alex Plavevski/EPA
The open-plan, shared office may be a thing of the past if physical distancing and stricter hygiene become the new normal.
The Life Care Center in Kirkland, Washington, had the first known COVID-19 outbreak in a U.S. nursing home. In Massachusetts, one-third of nursing homes now have more than 30 COVID-19 cases.
Jason Redmond/AFP/Getty Images
The government doesn’t know how many people have died of COVID-19, in part because it didn’t require nursing homes to report cases to the CDC. In some states, over half of deaths are in nursing homes.
Even in quarantine, people around the world have to walk their dogs.
AP Photo/Mindaugas Kulbis
Pets might not protect us from the coronavirus, but they can help us get better.
In the rural South, chronic illnesses are common, the population is older and health care options have been declining as hospitals close. All put the population at higher risk from COVID-19.
AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis
Southern governors are starting to reopen their economies at the same time COVID-19 cases are spreading through the rural South.
California is working with Oregon and Washington on coordinated plans for phasing in the reopening of restaurants, stores and other parts of their economies in a way that can keep the coronavirus pandemic at bay.
Amy Sussman/Getty Images
How and when the US economy reopens will look different state to state, and for good reasons. This Q&A explains why, and why some states are working together.
Tiny fuel cells convert sweat to electricity that can power sensors in electronic skin.
Yu et al., Sci. Robot. 5, eaaz7946 (2020)
Lightweight, flexible materials can be used to make health-monitoring wearable devices, but powering the devices is a challenge. Using fuel cells instead of batteries could make the difference.
One person has tested positive for COVID-19 in Eabametoong First Nation.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Ryan Remiorz
Canada’s public health-care system is one of the most well-developed in the world. And yet, many remote Indigenous communities are still not getting what they need.