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Fear of Missing out Boosting Global Acceptance of Covid Jab, Survey Suggests

Fear of Missing out Boosting Global Acceptance of Covid Jab, Survey Suggests

International study finds change in attitudes possibly driven by anticipated regret of not having vaccine.

Opinion | The Secret Life of a Coronavirus

Opinion | The Secret Life of a Coronavirus

An oily, 100-nanometer-wide bubble of genes has killed more than two million people and reshaped the world. Scientists don't quite know what to make of it.

The Coronavirus Is Plotting a Comeback. Here's Our Chance to Stop It for Good.

The Coronavirus Is Plotting a Comeback. Here's Our Chance to Stop It for Good.

Many scientists are expecting another rise in infections. But this time the surge will be blunted by vaccines and, hopefully, widespread caution. By summer, Americans may be looking at a return to normal life.

The Scientist Who's Been Right About Covid-19 Vaccines Predicts What's Next

The Scientist Who's Been Right About Covid-19 Vaccines Predicts What's Next

Hilda Bastian on the most important pandemic vaccine in the pipeline and why we're on track for annual booster shots.

Widely Shared Vitamin D-COVID-19 Preprint Removed from Lancet Server

Widely Shared Vitamin D-COVID-19 Preprint Removed from Lancet Server

A preprint promoted by a member of the UK Parliament for claiming to show that vitamin D led to an “80% reduction in need for ICU and a 60% reduction in deaths” has been removed from a server used by The Lancet family of journals.

The Myth of 'Good Covid Vaccines' and 'Bad Covid Vaccines'

The Myth of 'Good Covid Vaccines' and 'Bad Covid Vaccines'

Experts fear false narratives about vaccines could slow down the task of inoculating people and create other problems in the future.

The Coronavirus is Here to Stay - Here's What That Means

The Coronavirus is Here to Stay - Here's What That Means

A Nature survey shows many scientists expect the virus that causes COVID-19 to become endemic, but it could pose less danger over time.

UK to Infect Up to 90 Healthy Volunteers with Covid in World First Trial

UK to Infect Up to 90 Healthy Volunteers with Covid in World First Trial

Covid human challenge study to start in weeks and will expose adults to virus in controlled environment.

'Politics Was Always in the Room.' WHO Mission Chief Reflects on China Trip Seeking COVID-19's Origin

'Politics Was Always in the Room.' WHO Mission Chief Reflects on China Trip Seeking COVID-19's Origin

WHO plans to release a summary report of the mission’s finding as early as this week; a full report will come later.

ELife Collaborates with Novel Coronavirus Research Compendium on Manuscript Curation and Review

ELife Collaborates with Novel Coronavirus Research Compendium on Manuscript Curation and Review

The two initiatives have come together in their shared objective to help scientists and the public navigate the high volume of important new research.

Unequal Burden: How the COVID-19 Pandemic is Adding to Women's Workloads

Unequal Burden: How the COVID-19 Pandemic is Adding to Women's Workloads

A new report for UN Women shows that women have seen a larger increase in unpaid work than men due to COVID-19.

South Africa Halts AstraZeneca Covid Vaccine Rollout As Shot Falters in Study

South Africa Halts AstraZeneca Covid Vaccine Rollout As Shot Falters in Study

A new analysis that suggests the shot "provides minimal protection" against mild disease caused by a new variant circulating in South Africa.

COVID-19 Data Portal - Accelerating Scientific Research Through Data

COVID-19 Data Portal - Accelerating Scientific Research Through Data

We need open data, especially open SARS-CoV-2 sequence data, and open science to beat COVID-19 and to prepare for future outbreaks.

Support for Self-Isolation is Critical in Covid-19 Response

Support for Self-Isolation is Critical in Covid-19 Response

Government action needed now to reduce infections and deaths The resurgence of covid-19 in the autumn of 2020 in many northern countries, including the UK, has been associated with tremendous morbidity and mortality. Before vaccination, the public health response focused on testing and population-wide restrictions, with the goal of decreasing contact between susceptible and contagious individuals. Striking and widening disparities in covid-19 related outcomes have highlighted the intersection of socioeconomic disadvantage and health inequalities, enhanced by structural racism.1234 Socioeconomically disadvantaged and many ethnic minority groups have been disproportionately affected, with increased risk of infection, hospital admission, and death.5678 Despite the vaccine rollout, many younger people, particularly those working in high exposure occupations, living in overcrowded housing, or without a home will remain subject to an ongoing burden of quarantine orders, along with a disproportionate risk of infection and onward transmission for the foreseeable future.159 An equitable and effective public health response requires the integration of supportive services to effectively decrease their contact rates and subsequently risk of infection.9 Most countries have used testing as a tool to interrupt transmission chains by encouraging isolation of contacts. However, the ability to quarantine until test results are available, and to …

How the Search for Covid-19 Treatments Faltered While Vaccines Sped Ahead

How the Search for Covid-19 Treatments Faltered While Vaccines Sped Ahead

Significantly less government funding was put towards researching treatments than vaccines. And national efforts to coordinate and recruit sick patients into trials were insufficient. The next few months will still bring many sick people - and doctors have woefully few drugs with which to treat them.