How the U.S. 'Uniquely Mismanaged' the Coronavirus Pandemic
After Kristine Tran, MS Global Health ’20, graduated this spring, she immediately began working at the Virginia Department of Health on COVID-19 contact tracing.
Risky Breathing and Policy: Lessons Learned from Smoking and Air Pollution
Those Who Social Distance Have Fraction of COVID-19 Risk Compared to Those Who Don’t
E-Cig Clouds Aren’t ‘Vapour’, Scientists Warn. That Word Just Makes Them Sound Safer
Getting a COVID-19 Test and an Antibody Test Done
No Sign of Second Wave Before Election, but U.S. COVID-19 Cases Could Get Worse
Policy experts spoke on the various needs of doctors, practices and health care providers at an online panel hosted by the College’s Center for Health Policy Research and Ethics.
A new study led by Dr. Kathryn H. Jacobsen and published in the Annals of Global Health in August examined all undergraduate minors in global health offered by accredited four-year colleges and universities in the United States during the 2019-20 academic year.
Study from George Mason reveals that accurately labeling e-cigarette emissions as ‘chemicals’ or ‘aerosols’ rather than ‘vapor’ increases the perceived risk of exposure. Higher perceived risk is linked to stronger support for smoke-free campus policies.