Vaccines are meant to help, not harm. So you can imagine our surprise when we first heard of the intriguing term gaining popularity among the anti-vaccine crowd: turbo-cancer.
COVID
While Americans increasingly shed masks, forgo COVID-19 boosters, and embrace post-pandemic normalcy, a viral specter is spreading across Asia — and it’s beginning to show up in the U.S.
A recent study from Clemson University sheds some light on double-dipping your favorite appetizers at a party: does it raise your risk for foodborne illnesses?
Much of the federal government’s response to the raging COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 was admirable.
Join Cameron English and Dr. Chuck Dinerstein on Episode 115 of the Science Dispatch podcast as they discuss:
The calamitous global outbreak of COVID-19 has sparked intense scrutiny of its origins.
The divisiveness pervading science and medicine has intensified since the COVID-19 pandemic, fueled by debates over vaccines, mandates and public health measures.
Providing consistent high-quality healthcare is difficult and complex, and because frontline workers, who directly interact with patients, are critical to achieving that, attracting, retaining, and motivating these staff is essential.
The folks at City Journal must not be aware of the Rule of Holes, “When you’re in a hole, stop digging.” Their contributors continue to make insupportable, easily disproved claims about the supposed lack of
Misguided COVID-minimizers like to say that COVID-19 is no worse than a cold that lasts a few days and then disappears without any sequelae. They’re so wrong, and the evidence of that continues to mount.
