NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with Dr. Zeke Emanuel, a former health policy adviser to the Obama administration, about health messaging during the pandemic.
New York is among the biggest coronavirus hotspots in the U.S. NPR's Ari Shapiro talks with Jean Randolph-Castro, the president of a Queens housing co-op, about the toll it has taken on her neighbors.
COVID-19 can cause a person's blood to thicken, doctors say. This manifestation of the infection may be causing strokes and other circulatory problems in patients whose symptoms are mild otherwise.
The coronavirus has hit the black community hard. NPR's Ari Shapiro speaks with Rev. Marshall Hatch of Mount Pilgrim Baptist Church in Chicago about existing inequalities the pandemic has exposed.
Governments worldwide are tracing people with COVID-19 to stop the spread of the virus. NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker about the state's contact tracing efforts.
NPR science and business correspondents talk about the protection of the workers — those working now, and those who will start soon, in a variety of industries.
"She tried to do her job and it killed her," Dr. Lorna Breen's father said of the 49-year-old doctor, who contracted the coronavirus. His daughter was a hero, Dr. Philip Breen says.
This year was supposed to be Airbnb's big year. The company planned to go public, but COVID-19 has all but destroyed their business model. Airbnb's CEO explains how they hope to survive the pandemic.
At issue: test distribution versus test completion. The vice president said his statement in March about 4 million tests referred to test distribution.