The Pandemic’s Next Turn Hinges on Three Unknowns
Ali Ellebedy, associate professor of pathology and immunology
When Should You Get a Covid-19 Booster Shot?
Ali Ellebedy, associate professor of pathology and immunology
Sachs discusses drug pricing reforms
Rachel Sachs, a health policy and drug law expert at the School of Law, discusses federal legislation that seeks to control drug prices on “Tradeoffs,” a national health policy podcast — and what the measure could mean for patients, insurers and pharmaceutical companies.
‘Forever Winter’: The Mental Health Message In The New Taylor Swift Song
Jessica Gold, MD, assistant professor of psychiatry
Midterm gloom grows for Democrats
Steven Smith, the Kate M. Gregg Distinguished Professor of Social Science
Why is Spire misleading its customers?
The one thing that is easy to see is that we did not need a new pipeline. So Spire is misleading the public, writes anthropology’s Bret Gustafson.
‘Literary invention in the age of disorder’
In a new book, Wolfram Schmidgen, professor of English in Arts & Sciences, explains how the excitement and anxiety about a disordered world affected literary invention in 18th-century England.
Rodgers’ vaccine comments may test his clout with sponsors
Patrick Rishe, director, Sports Business Program, and professor of practice in sports business
It Follows Earth Around the Sun. Just Don’t Call It a Moon.
Paul Byrne, associate professor of earth and planetary sciences
Podcast explores vaccines for younger kids
This episode of the “Show Me the Science” podcast focuses on the newly announced federal emergency use authorization to vaccinate children ages 5 to 11. Millions of such children could be fully vaccinated by the end of November.
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