Pregnant and Unvaccinated: Delta's Deadly Toll

Trouble viewing? View in your browser.
View all Scientific American publications.
    
October 01, 2021

Vaccines

Pregnant and Unvaccinated: Delta's Deadly Toll

The number of pregnant people suffering from severe COVID is preventable tragedy

By Carolyn Barber

Public Health

Why We Need to Upgrade Our Face Masks--and Where to Get Them

High-quality respirators such as N95s and K95s are now widely available and provide the best protection against COVID, according to experts. Why aren't more people wearing them?

By Tanya Lewis

Health Care

Can Psychedelic Drugs Treat Physical Pain?

LSD and psilocybin increasingly show promise as mental health treatments. Now universities and companies are exploring their use in pain management

By Troy Farah

Climate Change

California Battles Historic Drought with $5.2 Billion

The state is using the money to upgrade drinking and wastewater systems, improve streamflows, and relocate vulnerable fish

By Anne C. Mulkern,E&E News

Animals

Night Flights Are No Sweat for Tropical Bees

New research uses night vision to see how nocturnal bees navigate the dark.

By Karen Hopkin | 03:58

Animals

How Rootworms Sniff Carbon Dioxide to Devastate Corn Crops

Scientists silenced CO2-sensing genes to determine how the destructive pests find their food

By Tess Joosse

Space Exploration

Even Rocket Launches Can't Escape COVID

Pandemic-spawned supply-chain disruptions are delaying launches and development of satellites, lunar rovers and interplanetary missions

By Irene Klotz

Medicine

New Ideas about the Way Autoimmune Diseases Start and How to Stop Them

Millions suffer from ailments such as type 1 diabetes and lupus, in which the body attacks itself

By Josh Fischman

Pharmaceuticals

Fringe Doctors' Groups Promote Ivermectin for COVID despite a Lack of Evidence

The organizations touting unproved protocols for the antiparasitic drug may be harming vaccination efforts

By Christina Szalinski

Computing

An Unsung Female Pioneer of Computer Simulation

A mid-20th-century computer experiment created a new field of science—and programmer Mary Tsingou Menzel is finally being given credit for her role in making it happen

By Virginia Grant

Public Health

Suicide Rates Rise in a Generation of Black Youth

Multiple causes underlie a disturbing trend. The increase for girls is more than double that for boys

By Melinda Wenner Moyer

Artificial Intelligence

What Is Machine Learning, and How Does It Work? Here's a Short Video Primer

Deep learning, neural networks, imitation games—what does any of this have to do with teaching computers to "learn"?

By Michael Tabb,Jeffery DelViscio,Andrea Gawrylewski

Conservation

Massively Reducing Food Waste Could Feed the World

It would also greatly cut greenhouse gas emissions

By Chad Frischmann,Mamta Mehra

Climate Change

Pandemic Could Stymie Effort to Cut Health Care Emissions

The strain from COVID will mean fewer resources and less attention on reducing carbon footprints

By Ariel Wittenberg,E&E News

Policy

50, 100 & 150 Years Ago: October 2021

Jupiter Pioneers get ready; wireless moths

By Mark Fischetti
FROM THE STORE

ADVERTISEMENT

FROM THE ARCHIVE

Why COVID Vaccines Are Likely Safe for Pregnant People

The scantness of available data leaves the decision up to the individual and their doctors, though benefits can outweigh risks in some cases

QUOTE OF THE DAY

"The Delta variant in unvaccinated pregnant patients is one of the most horrifying disease processes I've ever seen."

Danielle Jones, obstetric hospitalist

LATEST ISSUES

Questions?   Comments?

Send Us Your Feedback
Download the Scientific American App
Download on the App Store
Download on Google Play

To view this email as a web page, go here.

You received this email because you opted-in to receive email from Scientific American.

To ensure delivery please add news@email.scientificamerican.com to your address book.

Unsubscribe     Manage Email Preferences     Privacy Policy     Contact Us

Comments

Popular Posts