Nearly three-quarters of U.S. adults (72%) say the COVID-19 pandemic did more to drive the country apart than to bring it ...
As COVID ‘contrarians’ take power, experts warn we’re even less prepared for the next pandemic
Without an honest public debate about what worked and what didn’t, public health experts say, we’re even less prepared for ...
Partial CDC data suggest that influenza deaths may have already reached as high as 2% of deaths for the week ending on Feb. 1 ...
Michael Rotolo contributed to this chapter. The COVID-19 pandemic had an enormous impact on how religious communities gather ...
The first few weeks of the Trump presidency have left some college leaders reminded of the uncertainty they felt during the early days of COVID-19.
3don MSN
By disparaging public-health methods and discrediting vaccines, the COVID‑19 minimizers cost hundreds of thousands of people ...
The U.S. has seen earlier and more intense surges of the flu and RSV this year than is typical, pediatrician Dr. Ryan Fulton notes.
An Omaha Public Schools principal said five years after the COVID-19 pandemic, schools are still dealing with the fallout of ...
According to the survey of nearly 10,000 U.S. adults, 72% say the pandemic deepened national divisions, while only 11% believe it fostered unity. Political polarization shaped responses to health ...
You think deciding what to wear to the office is a pain? Retailers that offer suits have been suffering from the shift to more casual attire.
Surveys before, early on in and towards the end of the covid-19 pandemic suggest that although older people's well-being ...
Nebraska Medicine's director of Behavioral Health remembers many health care workers having to pick up extra shifts because ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results