Even Mild COVID Can Increase the Risk of Heart Problems

Trouble viewing? View in your browser.
View all Scientific American publications.
    
March 16, 2022

Epidemiology

Even Mild COVID Can Increase the Risk of Heart Problems

Scientists are just starting to unravel the disease's long-term cardiac effects

By Mariana Lenharo

Health Care

Gun Violence Is an Epidemic; Health Systems Must Step Up

There are tools that hospitals can use to reduce the number of firearm injuries that come through the doors. We are piloting one such project

By Michael Dowling,Chethan Sathya

Climate Change

War in Ukraine and Climate Change Could Combine to Create a Food Crisis

Russia's invasion is halting the delivery of wheat to areas suffering from drought and other climate impacts

By Sara Schonhardt,Benjamin Storrow,E&E News

Education

To Keep Students in STEM fields, Let's Weed Out the Weed-Out Math Classes

Reimagining calculus has changed several schools' success rates. Here's how

By Pamela Burdman

Health Care

Pandemic-Era Research Will Pay Off for Years

The COVID research infrastructure will help fight all sorts of pathogens

By Britt Glaunsinger

Inequality

U.S. Records Reveal Bias against Muslim and Black Citizenship Applicants

The likelihood of attending a naturalization ceremony is lower for Black people, men and people from Muslim-majority countries

By Emily Willingham

Paleontology

Newly Discovered Saber-Tooth Predator Shows How Hypercarnivores Evolved

A well-preserved fossil introduces a new species that lived in what is now California around 42 million years ago

By Raegan Scharfetter

Artificial Intelligence

Are You Better Than a Machine at Spotting a Deepfake?

New research shows that detecting digital fakes generated by machine learning might be a job best done with humans still in the loop. 

By Sarah Vitak | 11:50

Epidemiology

People, Not Science, Decide When a Pandemic Is Over

Historians of the 1918 influenza pandemic discuss lessons for what the future of COVID might look like

By Tanya Lewis

Public Health

Contagions Worse Than COVID Will Prevail If Neglect of Global Public Health Continues

Health security is as important to a nation as a standing army

By The Editors

Culture

Popular Health Claims, Such as a Woman's Fertility Dropping at Age 30, Are Wildly Overblown

People should be skeptical of big claims based on only one study and dig a little deeper

By Naomi Oreskes
FROM THE STORE

ADVERTISEMENT

FROM THE ARCHIVE

COVID's Cardiac Connection

Coronavirus infections might cause lasting harm to the heart even in those who have never had symptoms

QUOTE OF THE DAY

"People think of cholesterol, blood pressure and diabetes as risk factors for heart problems. We need to add COVID-19 to that list."

Ziyad Al-Aly, chief of research and development at the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs St. Louis Health Care System

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