We’ve learned a lot about COVID-19 over the last five years, but big questions remain. Recent federal actions may hinder the disease’s management.
US President Donald Trump’s decision to withdraw from the World Health Organization (WHO) last month set off a domino effect across the globe – but no one knows exactly what happens next.
NPR reflects on the cascading events of March 11, 2020, the day the World Health Organization declared COVID-19 a pandemic.
About 1.22 million people have died of COVID in the U.S., CDC data shows. Tuesday marks five years since the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the global outbreak of COVID-19 to be a pandemic.
ON MARCH 11TH, 2020, AFTER MORE THAN 118,000 CASES IN 114 COUNTRIES, THE WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION DECLARED COVID 19 A PANDEMIC, CAUSING LOCKDOWNS, SOCIAL DISTANCING AND MASKING UP. AS WE WERE ...
It's been five years since the World Health Organization declared COVID-19 to be a pandemic. Vaccine expert Dr. Paul Offit criticizes the decision as something coming from a “science resistant ...
BENGALURU, India (AP) — Most of the world has dirty air, with just 17% of cities globally meeting air pollution guidelines, a report Tuesday found. Switzerland-based air quality monitoring ...
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COVID-19 in the time of Duterte
Five years ago in mid-March 2020, the Philippines, like most countries, went on a lockdown never before experienced by ...
An unknown illness has killed over 50 people in the northwest of the Democratic Republic of Congo, according to doctors in the central African nation and the World Health Organization. The ...
MANILA, March 11 (Reuters) - Former Philippines leader Rodrigo Duterte ... that killed thousands and drew condemnation around the world. Sign up here. Duterte, 79, could become the first Asian ...
the United States has carved out a crucial $336 million for the modernisation of the Philippines' security forces, a report revealed. This package is part of the massive $5.3 billion in previously ...
With the acute phase of the Covid-19 pandemic fading even as the coronavirus persists and evolves, a new normal is taking shape around the world. “It still feels kind of incomplete,” said ...