Heide Petterson (wormfriday49)

The covid-19 pandemic has encouraged more people to make advance treatment decisions relating to CPR and ventilation, reports Clare Wilson. © 2020.As countries look to ease restrictions and manage second waves of cases, apps are appealing but fraught with issues, reports Adam Vaughan. © 2020.From lifestyle to immune system differences, there are a number of reasons why men may be more affected by covid-19, reports Graham Lawton. © 2020.Key scientific data and advice to the UK government won't be published until the coronavirus pandemic ends, reports David Adam. © 2020.Coronavirus will overshadow Earth Day's golden anniversary, but the movement's successes are worth celebrating, says Gary Paul Nabhan. © 2020.Official advice on masks for the general public is mixed, and there are concerns about taking vital supplies away from healthcare workers, reports Jessica Hamzelou. © 2020.Doctors on the front line in the Chinese province where the coronavirus outbreak started tell Donna Lu about their experiences treating covid-19. © 2020.As covid-19 begins to take hold, the Democratic Republic of the Congo has detected its first new Ebola cases in months, reports Peter Yeung. © 2020.Fever can be deadly, but in moderation it could have some surprising upsides, as Linda Geddes discovers. © 2020 Reed Business Information Ltd, England.A young couple in need of a starter home meet an estate agent who is very definitely not what he seems, and nor is the estate he shows them. Vivarium packs a powerful punch, says Simon Ings. © 2020.The new coronavirus has many of us stuck at home. The result could fundamentally reshape how we use the internet, writes Annalee Newitz. © 2020.Children will face many hidden negative effects from the new coronavirus- it's not too late to avert them, says Paul Ramchandani. © 2020.With more than a third of the world living under covid-19 restrictions, it is time to decide what happens next, reports Graham Lawton. © 2020.Coronavirus will play out very differently in the world's poorest nations. © 2020.Knowing the true rate of death from covid-19 will help us fight the pandemic, but for the moment it eludes us, reports Michael Le Page. © 2020.Thousands of people are searching for coronavirus treatments. Which are most promising and when will we have them, asks Carrie Arnold. © 2020 Reed Business Information Ltd, England.David Attenborough's latest film A Life on Our Planet is a powerful and unusually personal call to action, finds Timothy Revell. Y-27632 purchase © 2020.Going out into the natural world is good for your health and mind, and you can still get some of the same benefits even when stuck inside, says Graham Lawton. © 2020.We can't lose sight of the climate emergency when dealing with the covid-19 pandemic, say Christiana Figueres and Tom Rivett-Carnac. © 2020.Microsoft-owned firm to go ahead with work to safeguard commonly used data. © 2020.If there is a shortage of breathing machines, doctors and ethicists say priority should go to people with the best chance of recovery, reports Alice Klein. © 2020.UK prime minister Boris Johnson says antibody tests for covid-19 are a game changer, but they may not do much in the short term, argues Michael Le Page. © 2020.Our pandemic response is cutting emissions, but it isn't a climate change fix. © 2020.We don't yet know if being exposed to more coronavirus particles leads to more severe covid-19 symptoms, reports Linda Geddes. © 2020.The coronavirus outbreak has hit the city hard and doctors are racing to treat the rapidly increasing cases, reports Carrie Arnold. © 2020.The new coronavirus is no small threat, but we are starting to understand how it works, reports Michael Marshall. © 2020.With the second-highest number of coronavirus cases globally, Italy is taking dramatic steps to slow the spread, reports Adam Vaughan. © 2020 Reed Business Information Ltd, England.This editorial calls for greater use of academic-practitioner workshops to co-create value for academi