The year is finally ending. More than 19 million people in the United States are known to have had the coronavirus. More than 338,000 of them have died. And in the final weeks of 2020, we’ve continued ...
Looking back at 2020 — the year of the coronavirus pandemic — the words chaotic, devastating, life-altering, never-ending and stressful come to mind. Related:COVID death toll in Volusia and Flagler ...
If the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach learned anything over the past year, it’s this: They need to be nimble. That lesson came courtesy of the coronavirus pandemic. The uncertainty of 2020, while ...
A growing body of evidence suggests the coronavirus was spreading globally months before the first cases in a Wuhan market captured global attention last December. The World Health Organization sent ...
As the number of coronavirus cases ticked upward in mid-November — worse than the frightening days of spring and ahead of an expected surge after families congregated for Thanksgiving — four doctors ...
The deaths, spread out across four states in January 2020, have become part of a scattershot collection of clues about the virus’s early spread. By Benjamin Mueller Late last year, the federal ...
The coronavirus pandemic forced a near-total shutdown of school buildings in the spring of 2020—an historic upheaval of K-12 schooling in the United States. Education Week tracked and documented the ...
Since the coronavirus first appeared, at the end of 2019, four and a half million people have died, countless more have suffered, whole economies have been upended, schools have been shuttered. Why?
As summer 2024 draws to a close, the U.S. finds itself once again grappling with a surge in COVID-19 infections. This wave has taken many people by surprise, particularly as the country has largely ...