Unraveling the Mystery of Why Children Are Better Protected from COVID Than Adults

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August 26, 2021

Public Health

Unraveling the Mystery of Why Children Are Better Protected from COVID Than Adults

Their immune system is more primed to fight off the novel coronavirus

By Lars Fischer

Evolution

How Did Neanderthals and Other Ancient Humans Learn to Count?

Archaeological finds suggest that people developed numbers tens of thousands of years ago. Scholars are now exploring the first detailed hypotheses about this life-changing invention

By Colin Barras,Nature magazine

Inequality

Too Many Scientists Still Say Caucasian

Racist ideas of categories for human identity continue to warp research and medicine
By Alice B. Popejoy,Nature magazine

Behavior

How to Reduce Racial Disparities in Smoking Deaths

African Americans die at a higher rate than other groups yet have a harder time quitting—but new evidence-based approaches can change that

By Bryan W. Heckman,Anne Davis,James E.K. Hildreth

Space Exploration

Why Jeff Bezos's Blue Origin Is So Reviled

Economic inequality, an indulgent trip to space and an ongoing legal battle with NASA are putting the space company in the hot seat

By Chelsea Gohd,SPACE.com

Public Health

How COVID, Inequality and Politics Make a Vicious Syndemic

Overlapping diseases and social conditions in the U.S. continue to dictate who is hurt most badly by the novel coronavirus

By Emily Mendenhall,Clarence C. Gravlee

Epidemiology

Humanitarians Push to Vaccinate in Conflict Zones

Pandemic ceasefires offer an opportunity to expand vaccination efforts, experts say. But negotiation is tricky

By Madeline Drexler,Undark

Policy

Is This Food Really Healthy? New Packaging Labels Would Tell You

A simple traffic light symbol or a set of stars on the fronts of food products would advise consumers

By Tess Joosse

Neurology

Alzheimer's, Inc.: When a Hypothesis Becomes Too Big to Fail

This summer's controversy surrounding the FDA's shocking approval of the drug aducanumab provides a window into a scientific field in crisis

By Daniel R. George,Peter J. Whitehouse

Natural Disasters

Home Seismometers Provide Crucial Data on Haiti's Quake

A volunteer network helps to monitor aftershocks and illuminate the country's earthquake hazards

By Alexandra Witze,Nature magazine

Transportation

Chip Shortage Could Slow Electric Vehicle Rollouts

And no one is certain how long the shortage will last

By Corbin Hiar,E&E News
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FROM THE ARCHIVE

Should Children Get COVID Vaccines? What the Science Says

With vaccination campaigns underway in some countries while others weigh the options, Nature looks at the evidence for vaccinating younger people

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