Indigenous Communities in Brazil Fear Pandemic's Impact
To the older generation of the Paiter Surui, the COVID-19 pandemic looks disturbingly familiar.
To the older generation of the Paiter Surui, the COVID-19 pandemic looks disturbingly familiar.
Some study authors use serology data to call for easing lockdowns, but critics push back.
One of the many COVID-19 vaccines in development has protected an animal, rhesus macaques, from infection by the new coronavirus, scientists report.
Statistical models of infectious disease are vital for understanding where the COVID-19 pandemic is headed.
Long hours, high risk of infection, and crushing uncertainty about how the pandemic will progress have led to high anxiety among health care workers in Mexico.
Reporting Fellow alum Sarah Fahmy reflects from Portland, Oregon, on how a previous natural disaster connects to the COVID-19 crisis today.
Political support is building for regulators in the United States to embrace the controversial strategy of intentionally infecting volunteers with the virus that causes COVID-19 in order to test experimental vaccines.
The antimalarials used against COVID-19 can increase the risk of cardiac arrest. Doctors seek to minimize the danger.
The national government in Japan has been slow to push for widespread social distancing.
Sewage has the potential to serve as a cheap, noninvasive tool to warn against outbreaks.
The results from the first batch of COVID-19 related surveys have generated more controversy than clarity.
As coronavirus causes travel restrictions, Medill School of Journalism student Rayna Song speaks to international students about their choice to travel home.