What Happens Next? COVID-19 Futures, Explained With Playable Simulations
An interactive guide
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An interactive guide
At this time of crisis, it is more important than ever for scientists around the world to openly share their knowledge, expertise, tools, and technology. Scientists must also openly share their model code so that the results can be replicated and evaluated.
The research community is reacting with alarm and anger to the National Institutes of Health’s (NIH’s) abrupt and unusual termination of a grant supporting research in China on how coronaviruses move from bats to humans. The agency axed the grant last week, after conservative U.S. politicians and media repeatedly suggested—without evidence—that the pandemic severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) escaped from a laboratory in Wuhan, China, that employs a Chinese virologist who had been receiving funding from the grant.
The Policy Briefs of the Swiss National COVID-19 Science Task Force are now available on its website. They reflect the Task Force thinking on a topic at that time and will be updated in the light of new studies or other data.
Retraction Watch has been tracking retractions of papers about COVID-19 as part of their database. Here's a running list, which will be updated as needed.
Preprints servers have become a vital medium for the rapid sharing of scientific findings. However, this speed and openness has also contributed to the ability of low quality preprints to derail public debate and feed conspiracy theories.
Christian Drosten, who has become Germany's most popular podcaster, warns against reopening the country too soon.
Eight ways in which scientists hope to provide immunity to SARS-CoV-2 .
Target audience are healthcare professionals from all specialities.
The scientific community must take up cudgels in the battle against bunk.
The European Commission is working on an investment plan to fuel the EU’s recovery from the Covid-19 pandemic, which Commission president Ursula von der Leyen has said must increase the “firepower” of the bloc’s 2021-27 budget, and R&D commissioner Mariya Gabriel has said must prioritise investment in R&D.
The American Physical Society held its massive April Meeting online because of coronavirus - and registrations soared.
Many initiatives are keeping track of research on COVID-19 and coronaviruses. These initiatives, while valuable because they allow for fast access to relevant research, pose the question of subject delineation. We analyse here one such initiative, the COVID-19 Open Research Dataset (CORD-19).
Early journal submission data suggest COVID-19 is tanking women's research productivity.
Far more people have died over the past month than have been officially reported, a review of mortality data in 11 countries shows.
The world is experiencing a major pandemic with a high mor-tality. One can hope that the outbreak will end spontaneously aftermost people are infected, but the SARS-2 coronavirus may becomeendemic and continue to cause cycles of respiratory disease andfatal pneumonias.
Herd immunity hopes dealt blow by report suggesting only 2%-3% of people have been infected
Secure contact tracing could be a powerful tool to fight the spread of COVID-19. A unique, decentralized system developed as part of an international consortium, including EPFL and ETH Zurich, will soon be launched with the support of the Swiss Federal Office of Public Health.
Anders Tegnell talks to Nature about the nation's 'trust-based' approach to tackling the pandemic.
Research shows almost 80% of deaths across four countries were in most polluted regions.
The lungs are ground zero for COVID-19, but blood clots may play a surprisingly big role in severe illness.