How Are We Possibly Still Disinfecting Things?
America can’t quit hygiene theater.
America can’t quit hygiene theater.
There are not enough humans to take care of all the animals.
Some tips for how to be a good sick person in the COVID era, whatever is ailing you
The medication is approved until week 10 of pregnancy in the U.S. But the WHO says it can be safely used until 12 weeks, and activists have used it even later.
For the first time, COVID vaccines are getting an update in the U.S. But Americans still need to be persuaded to take them.
In the face of government inaction, the country’s best chance at keeping the crisis from spiraling relies on everyone to keep caring.
It’s long past time to forget them all.
If the virus finds a new animal host, it could settle in for the long run—and cause more outbreaks in the future.
The torrent of rainfall that devoured roads and swept away bridges on Monday was supposedly a “1,000-year event.” But what does that even mean these days?
A tidal wave of chronic illness could leave millions of people incrementally worse off.
Monkeypox is very different from COVID—and will require a very different vaccination approach.
A string of negatives can still presage a clear-as-day positive.
Three possible paths the virus could take in the United States
COVID vaccines for infants and toddlers are stalling and stumbling even before they’ve left the gate.
Kids are at risk of severe COVID outcomes—and immunity from infection isn’t enough.
In the winter, cases shot up and plummeted with unprecedented speed. But something else is going on with this surge.
Images from the past few weeks of lockdown, and early signs of Shanghai’s reopening
The long, maddening wait reveals much about the world’s vaccine priorities.
It used to dominate American fitness practice. Now it’s all but over.
Will the danger mount each time, or will it fade away?