What Genetics Can–and Cannot–Reveal about an Individual's COVID Risk

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May 18, 2022

Health Care

What Genetics Can--and Cannot--Reveal about an Individual's COVID Risk

Genome-wide association studies can sleuth out genetic markers that raise or lower COVID risk, but they miss social factors

By Joanna Thompson

Mental Health

Mental Health Care Should Be Available for All, Not a Luxury

The stress of COVID fractured a system that was already cracked

By Sarah Sloat

Public Health

How Accurate Are Rapid COVID Tests?

Two testing experts explain the latest data on how well the assays perform

By Nathaniel Hafer,Apurv Soni,The Conversation US

Extraterrestrial Life

Origin of Life Theory Involving RNA–Protein Hybrid Gets New Support

A structure that links amino acids suggests that early organisms could have been based on an RNA-protein mix

By Davide Castelvecchi,Nature magazine

Space Exploration

Boeing's Starliner Launch Will Bring New Cargo and Science to the Space Station

The uncrewed flight includes a payload of food, provisions and a specialized flight-test dummy

By Josh Dinner,SPACE.com

Vaccines

What the U.S. Can Learn from Brazil's Successful COVID Vaccination Campaign

Despite similar leadership at the start of the pandemic, Brazilians are more trusting of government and view vaccination as a necessity and a right

By Adriana de Souza e Silva,Claudio Araujo

Consciousness

We Shouldn't Try to Make Conscious Software--Until We Should

Eventually, the most ethical option might be to divert all resources toward building very happy machines

By Jim Davies

Natural Disasters

Climate Change Caused $4 Billion of Typhoon's Damage

A new wave of attribution research links the economic cost of weather events to climate change

By Chelsea Harvey,E&E News

Conservation

The Scientists Fighting for Parasite Conservation

Parasites play an outsize role in balancing ecosystems, and some species may be in danger

By Rachel Nuwer
FROM THE STORE
FROM THE ARCHIVE

Genes May Influence COVID-19 Risk, New Studies Hint

DNA changes tied to immune reactions, a viral doorway and blood type could affect disease severity

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