What makes a 'wave' of disease? An epidemiologist explains
There's no scientific definition for a wave of disease – and no evidence that the original onslaught of coronavirus in the US has receded much at all.
Abram L. Wagner, Research Assistant Professor of Epidemiology, University of Michigan •
conversation
July 6, 2020 • ~8 min
July 6, 2020 • ~8 min
The US isn't in a second wave of coronavirus – the first wave never ended
The recent spike in new coronavirus cases in the US is not due to a second wave, but simply the virus moving into new populations or surging in places that opened up too soon.
Melissa Hawkins, Professor of Public Health, Director of Public Health Scholars Program, American University •
conversation
June 30, 2020 • ~8 min
June 30, 2020 • ~8 min
Ready to see your doctor but scared to go? Here are some guidelines
Many people delayed routine doctor visits during social distancing. Now that distancing guidelines have eased, people still are concerned about going to the doctor. Here, two doctors offer guidance.
Margot Savoy, Department Chair & Associate Professor, Family & Community Medicine, Temple University
• conversation
June 16, 2020 • ~7 min
June 16, 2020 • ~7 min
Compare the flu pandemic of 1918 and COVID-19 with caution – the past is not a prediction
Differences in the viruses' biology and societal contexts mean there's no guarantee today's pandemic will mirror the 'waves' of infection a century ago.
Megan Culler Freeman, Pediatric Infectious Diseases Fellow, University of Pittsburgh •
conversation
June 4, 2020 • ~11 min
June 4, 2020 • ~11 min
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