Music videos, TikTok, and other creative ways people are fighting COVID-19 By Sara Kiley Watson / Mar 2, 2020
What COVID-19’s ‘inevitable’ spread in the United States actually means By Molly Glick / Feb 26, 2020
Just how contagious is COVID-19? This chart puts it in perspective. By Matthew R. Francis / Feb 20, 2020
The prejudice stemming from the coronavirus outbreak isn’t new By Marisa Peryer/Undark / Feb 19, 2020
A small coronavirus breakthrough could aid in the search for a vaccine By Ian Christopher Davis/The Conversation / Feb 1, 2020
A century ago the Spanish flu killed 50 million—and then we forgot about it By Eleanor Cummins / Oct 4, 2018
Five things you might not know about the plague (not including the fact that it still exists) By Sara Chodosh / Jun 15, 2018
A hundred years later, we’re still not sure why the Spanish flu killed so many people By Gerardo Chowell, Cecile Viboud, and Lone Simonsen/The Conversation / Mar 5, 2018
Flu Researchers Say: Let Us Get Back To Work Studying Risky Mutations By Rebecca Boyle / Jan 24, 2013
A New Moratorium on Research Into Engineered Avian Flu: What It Means for Science By Rebecca Boyle / Jan 25, 2012
Should a New Recipe for Engineered Bird Flu, Potent Enough to Kill Millions, Be Published? By Rebecca Boyle / Nov 29, 2011
How Quickly Could a Single Supervirus Spread to Every Single Person on Earth? By Rose Pastore / Oct 15, 2010
The Army Wants a Genetic Vaccinator that Blasts Doses of DNA Right Through the Patient’s Skin By Clay Dillow / Aug 3, 2010