U.S. Suspends Funding for Group at Center of Covid Origins Fight
The decision came after a scorching hearing in which lawmakers barraged EcoHealth Alliance’s president with claims of misrepresenting work with Chinese virologists.
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With the acute phase of the Covid-19 pandemic fading even as the coronavirus persists and evolves, a new normal is taking shape around the world.
The decision came after a scorching hearing in which lawmakers barraged EcoHealth Alliance’s president with claims of misrepresenting work with Chinese virologists.
By Benjamin Mueller
The shot is no longer being manufactured or supplied, and it is no longer authorized for use in Europe.
By Rebecca Robbins
All vaccines have at least occasional side effects. But people who say they were injured by Covid vaccines believe their cases have been ignored.
By Apoorva Mandavilli
Thousands of Americans believe they experienced rare but serious side effects. But confirming a link is a difficult task.
By Apoorva Mandavilli
New York Times readers share the moment they realized Covid would change the world.
By Catherine Pearson
What the Data Says About Pandemic School Closures, Four Years Later
The more time students spent in remote instruction, the further they fell behind. And, experts say, extended closures did little to stop the spread of Covid.
By Sarah Mervosh, Claire Cain Miller and Francesca Paris
Four Years On, Covid Has Reshaped Life for Many Americans
Covid was declared a national emergency on March 13, 2020. Even as the threat of severe illness and death has faded, the pandemic’s effects linger.
By Julie Bosman
Audience Snapshot: Four Years After Shutdown, a Mixed Recovery
Covid brought live performance to a halt. Now the audience for pop concerts and sporting events has roared back, while attendance on Broadway and at some major museums is still down.
Four Years On, the Mysteries of Covid Are Unraveling
Are superdodgers real? Is Covid seasonal? And what’s behind its strangest symptoms? Here’s what we’ve learned.
By Knvul Sheikh
Years of vitriolic rhetoric, worsened by the Covid-19 pandemic and the war in Ukraine, left Slovakia with bitter political division.
By Andrew Higgins and Cassandra Vinograd
We made a block-by-block interactive map of the U.S. to show how gun violence changed during the pandemic. Eli Murray, a graphics editor for The New York Times, gives some takeaways.
By Eli Murray, Ruru Kuo and Claire Hogan
The footprint of gun violence in the U.S. has expanded, as shootings worsened in already suffering neighborhoods and killings spread to new places during the pandemic years.
By Robert Gebeloff, K.K. Rebecca Lai, Eli Murray, Josh Williams and Rebecca Lieberman
La KP.2 pertenece al subgrupo de las variantes del coronavirus que los científicos han denominado “FLiRT”. Los investigadores y los médicos observan con atención por si esta variante provoca un repunte en verano.
By Dani Blum
Michael D. Cohen spent time in prison for felony charges tied to hush-money deals, as well lying to Congress and tax evasion. He has been free since 2020.
By Ben Protess
Yet Zhang Zhan’s supporters and human rights activists who had followed her case said they could not reach her or her family members.
By Vivian Wang
We asked voters for the one thing they remembered most about the Trump era. Few of them cited major events like the pandemic and Jan. 6.
By Christine Zhang, Sean Catangui and Alex Lemonides
Experts are closely watching KP.2, now the leading variant.
By Dani Blum
La vacuna ya no se fabrica, no se suministra y su uso ya no está autorizado en Europa. Los expertos aseguran que se debe a que no pudo actualizarse a las nuevas variantes.
By Rebecca Robbins
A long-awaited new policy broadens the type of regulated viruses, bacteria, fungi and toxins, including those that could threaten crops and livestock.
By Carl Zimmer and Benjamin Mueller
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