US study discovers toothbrushes and showerheads covered in viruses new to science Article 705 words 16 votes
Study of 500,000 medical records links viruses with Alzheimer's again and again Article 524 words 29 votes
What we know about Covid’s impact on your brain: Scientists are worried that persisting cognitive issues may signal a coming surge of dementia and other mental conditions Article 77 words 36 votes
World Health Organization declares mpox outbreaks in Africa a global health emergency as a new form of the virus spreads medicine Article 975 words 44 votes
Early tests of H5N1 prevalence in milk suggest US bird flu outbreak in cows is widespread Article 1669 words 63 votes
"I watched fifteen hours of COVID origins arguments so you don't have to" Article 12 171 words 30 votes
Are cures for some of the world’s deadliest diseases hiding in our sewers? medicine Article 2304 words, published Dec 16 2022 7 votes
How often can you be infected with the Coronavirus? The spread of the Omicron variant has given scientists an unsettling answer: repeatedly, sometimes within months medicine Article 1068 words 10 votes
Psychiatrists are uncovering connections between mental health and viruses ~health.mental Article 2821 words, published Dec 1 2021 7 votes
Wuhan scientists planned to release coronaviruses into cave bats eighteen months before outbreak Article 319 words 7 votes
Scientists stuck as China keeps foiling World Health Organization investigation on virus origin Article 532 words 16 votes
The lab-leak hypothesis—for decades, scientists have been hot-wiring viruses in hopes of preventing a pandemic, not causing one. But what if …? Article 2597 words, published Jan 4 2021 18 votes
How Iceland hammered COVID with science – the tiny island nation brought huge scientific heft to its attempts to contain and study the coronavirus Article 2897 words 9 votes
Bradykinin storms are the hottest new hypothesis for why Covid-19 can wreak havoc on the body medicine Article 2460 words 12 votes
Headaches top symptom for coronavirus, but only one third have any sign of illness medicine Article 446 words 6 votes
A plasma shot could prevent coronavirus. But feds and makers won’t act, scientists say medicine Article 1738 words 15 votes
Immunity to COVID-19 may wane just two to three months after infection, study suggests Article 748 words 13 votes
HIV drugs have transformed the lives of people in rich nations. In Papua New Guinea, the virus is mutating medicine Article 1643 words 8 votes
World Health Organization says new virus outbreak in China needs further testing after 'hypothesis' on cause Article 471 words 5 votes
Coronavirus may be a blood vessel disease, which explains everything medicine Article 54 words 26 votes
What we know about your chances of catching the virus outdoors: Pandemic life is safer outdoors, in part, because even a light wind will quickly dilute the virus Article 216 words 8 votes
Vitamin D levels appear to play role in COVID-19 mortality rates: Patients with severe deficiency are twice as likely to experience major complications medicine Article 754 words 12 votes
Erin Bromage, PHD examines the risks of coronavirus exposure in different environments and settings Article 3097 words, published May 6 2020 6 votes
The problem with stories about dangerous coronavirus mutations. There’s no clear evidence that the pandemic virus has evolved into significantly different forms—and there probably won’t be for months Article 2076 words 8 votes
Italian scientists claim to have developed vaccine that neutralises coronavirus in human cells Link 8 votes
The controversial experiments and Wuhan lab accused by some of starting the coronavirus pandemic Article 3661 words, published Apr 27 2020 4 votes
First drug known to work against SARS-CoV-2— remdesivir—imaged in action medicine Article 1116 words 11 votes
In race for a coronavirus vaccine, an Oxford group leaps ahead: As scientists at the Jenner Institute prepare for mass clinical trials, new tests show their vaccine to be effective in monkeys medicine Article 6 votes
Are "immunity certificates" actually feasible? Thoughts from an expert on viral antibodies Link 6 votes
Could you get COVID-19 and not even know it? The simple answer is yes — but you're more likely to have some symptoms, even if they're mild Article 875 words 5 votes