Germany will start offering coronavirus jabs to children over the age of 12 from June 7, Chancellor Angela Merkel said
Month: May 2021
New tool uses AI technology to assess the severity of lung infections and inform treatment
Artificial intelligence (AI) technology developed by researchers at the University of Waterloo is capable of assessing the severity of COVID-19
Future pandemics targeted by new Oxford research center
Oxford University is launching an effort to bring together academic, industry and government experts from around the world to use
Australia’s COVID success under threat as Melbourne goes into lockdown
Five million weary Melbourne residents were put back under lockdown on Friday, straining local resolve and testing Australia’s “zero-COVID” strategy
Japan to extend virus emergency until month before Olympics
Japan will extend a coronavirus state of emergency in Tokyo and other areas on Friday until just a month before
South Africa starts jabs for elderly as virus surge looms
Spry and gray-haired, many dressed in their Sunday best or colorful African prints—and all sporting masks—dozens of South Africans aged
New research could pave the way for safer and more efficient COVID-19 testing
International research led by Monash University and the Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity has achieved a proof of
Many pre-surgery tests are useless, so why are hospitals still using them?
Patients facing relatively simple outpatient surgeries are nonetheless being told to undergo a number of preoperative tests that just aren’t
Study upgrades one of the largest databases of neuronal types
A study led by researchers from the Institute Cajal of Spanish Research Council (CSIC) in Madrid, Spain in collaboration with
Microbial gene discovery could mean greater gut health
As the owner of a human body, you’re carrying trillions of microbes with you everywhere you go. These microscopic organisms