Most Covid Infections May Soon Be Breakthroughs. Here’s What That Means.
Ali Ellebedy, associate professor of pathology & immunology
Better sleep for better health
We may not think about sleeping as a healthy behavior like we would exercising or eating a healthy diet, but we probably should, writes Graham Colditz.
A Guide to Holiday Tipping This Year
Leonard Green, professor of psychological & brain sciences and of economics
As a mentor and a leader, this Black orthopedic surgeon fights to diversify his field
Eric Carson, MD, professor of orthopedic surgery at the School of Medicine and head of the J. Robert Gladden Orthopaedic Society, talks about his path toward becoming a doctor and his efforts to encourage more Black students to enter the field.
The best way to protect personal biomedical data from hackers could be to treat the problem like a game
Our methods can be used to protect various types of data, such as personal demographics or genome sequences, from attacks on anonymity, write Yevgeniy Vorobeychik associate professor of computer science, and colleagues.
I Can’t Self-Care My Way Into Feeling Better Anymore
Jessica Gold, MD, assistant professor of psychiatry
The New Sex and the City Shows the Problem With HBO’s Reboots
If networks like HBO keep turning to the past, the much-ballyhooed revolution might pass them by. And just like that… the show would be over, writes Phillip Maciak, lecturer in English.
Manchin’s child tax credit stance draws criticism back home
Social Policy Institute
Child tax credit benefit launched during COVID nears lapse
Social Policy Institute
‘Like drinking from a fire hose’: Health care workers traumatized by pandemic
Jessica Gold, MD, assistant professor of psychiatry
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