The Risk of Vaccinated COVID Transmission Is Not Low

Trouble viewing? View in your browser.
View all Scientific American publications.
    
December 16, 2021

Vaccines

The Risk of Vaccinated COVID Transmission Is Not Low

After my son got sick, I dived into the data, and it turns out vaccinated people can and do spread COVID

By Jennifer Frazer

Weather

Tornadoes at Night and in the Southeast Are Especially Deadly

Population density and a prevalence of mobile homes make the region a hotspot for tornado deaths

By Andrea Thompson

Biotech

A Portable MRI Makes Imaging More Democratic

An open-source approach downsizes today's clunking behemoths with permanent magnets and deep-learning algorithms

By Simon Makin

Climate Change

DNA in Air Can Catalog Hidden Insects All around Us

New proof-of-concept research shows how environmental DNA (eDNA) technology could be used to assess what is buzzing by

By Katharine Gammon

Robotics

Want to Get Humans to Trust Robots? Let Them Dance

A performance with living and mechanical partners can teach researchers how to design more relatable bots

By Sam Jones

Astrophysics

NASA Spacecraft 'Touches' the Sun for the First Time Ever

The Parker Solar Probe has passed through a boundary and into the Sun's atmosphere, gathering data that will help scientists better understand stars

By Alexandra Witze,Nature magazine

Privacy

The Log4J Software Flaw Is 'Christmas Come Early' for Cybercriminals

A cybersecurity expert explains how the widely used logging software is already making us more vulnerable

By Sophie Bushwick

Astronomy

James Webb Space Telescope Launch Delayed to Christmas Eve--or Later

A communications glitch between the observatory and its launch vehicle forced the delay, NASA officials say

By Hanneke Weitering,SPACE.com

Public Health

Rapid COVID Tests Could Help Curb Infections--Especially During the Holidays

An expert answers questions about when and how to use the tests

By Nathaniel Hafer,The Conversation US

Politics

Dr. Oz Shouldn't Be a Senator--or a Doctor

His brand of misinformation has already tarnished medicine. In the halls of Congress, he'd do much worse

By Timothy Caulfield

Conservation

Wildfires Are Putting Giant Sequoias at Existential Risk

The future of these guardians of the forest, some thousands of years old, is not assured

By Dominic Smith,Andrew Robinson
FROM THE STORE

ADVERTISEMENT

FROM THE ARCHIVE

Vaccines Need Not Completely Stop COVID Transmission to Curb the Pandemic

Lessons from other viruses show that even if vaccines don't completely stop disease spread, they can still successfully contain it

QUOTE OF THE DAY

"It is vital that people responsible for the health of unvaccinated children, as well as people at high risk of infection, understand this: COVID vaccines make it less likely you'll get sick and especially unlikely you'll get very sick. But vaccinated people--whether they have symptoms or not--are contracting and spreading the virus in nontrivial numbers."

Jennifer Frazer, science writer

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