Mix-and-Match COVID Vaccines: The Case Is Growing, but Questions Remain

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July 09, 2021

Medicine

Mix-and-Match COVID Vaccines: The Case Is Growing, but Questions Remain

Studies suggest mixing vaccines provokes potent immune responses, but scientists want answers on real-world efficacy and rare side effects

By Dyani Lewis,Nature magazine

Climate

Cities along the Great Lakes Face Rising Water and Costs

Climate change could cost municipalities $2 billion in damages through 2025
By Daniel Cusick,E&E News

Environment

Narwhal Tusks Point to Changing Arctic Conditions

Pollutants have increased, and prey has changed, as the water warms, a chemical analysis of tusks shows

By Susan Cosier

Biology

Galileo and the Pope Who Loved Cicadas

The legendary scientist used the insects' songs as a metaphor for his theories about the universe. It didn't go well

By Nuno Castel-Branco

Physics

Highest-Energy Particles Yet Arrive from Ancient Crab Nebula

Astronomers have observed record-breaking photons that strain classical theories of acceleration

By Ling Xin

Policy & Ethics

The NFL's Racist 'Race Norming' Is an Afterlife of Slavery

A statistical manipulation that underpaid Black players in concussion settlements exemplifies American football's immersion in the legacy of slavery

By Tracie Canada,Chelsey R. Carter

Math

Fields Medals Are Concentrated in Mathematical 'Families'

Elite mathematicians tend to pass their prestige down to advisees

By Clara Moskowitz,Shirley Wu

Space

China's Moon Samples Could Revise Lunar Chronology

Scientists around the world are eager to analyze young lunar rocks

By Irene Klotz

Policy & Ethics

If You Say 'Science Is Right,' You're Wrong

It can't supply absolute truths about the world, but it brings us steadily closer

By Naomi Oreskes

Policy & Ethics

Research on Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders Is Being Stifled

Funders and peer reviewers are contributing to systemic racism through their biases about members of these populations

By Amy Yee

Behavior & Society

What Fighting COVID and Fighting Drug Addiction Have in Common

In both cases, harm reduction is a better strategy than draconian rules that feel virtuous but don't actually work

By Maia Szalavitz
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FROM THE ARCHIVE

Which COVID Vaccine Is 'Best'? Why Do Some People Have Side Effects? Experts Answer These Questions and More

Scientific American talked to scientists about everything from what efficacy means to protection against the new coronavirus variants

QUOTE OF THE DAY

"If it's an option of either getting a mixed schedule or no second dose, then certainly go for the mixed schedule."

Matthew Snape, Oxford vaccine researcher

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