News
Millions of kindergarteners across the country are entering classrooms for the first time, five years after a pandemic that ...
For the first time in 30 years, the American Academy of Pediatrics is substantially diverging from U.S. government vaccine ...
The recommendations are part of the AAP's annual childhood immunization schedule, which includes guidance for COVID, flu and ...
The American Journal of Managed Care spoke with Lauren Wisk, PhD about her recent study aimed at assessing various definitions of long COVID and how a standard definition might aid physicians in ...
Houston ISD enrollment is dropping fast. State-appointed Superintendent Mike Miles touts higher test scores but he needs to ...
President Donald Trump has removed former U.S. Rep. Billy Long as IRS commissioner less than two months after his ...
This week, President Donald Trump called Operation Warp Speed, a public-private federal program that helped speed up the ...
The New York Times reports that text messages between European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and a pharmaceutical boss during the COVID-19 pandemic were seen by her top adviser ...
The COVID pandemic likely began when the virus jumped from animals to humans, and didn’t start in a lab. But false narratives continue to circulate.
A new scientific study, published this month in Nature Communications, has revealed that the pandemic may have accelerated brain aging in people even if they were never infected with the coronavirus.
A UK study using brain scans reveals that the COVID-19 pandemic accelerated brain ageing—even in uninfected individuals—highlighting the toll of stress, isolation, and inequality on brain health.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results