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The Conversation USA

We may be safer now from coronavirus than we were three months ago, but we're not totally safe

  • Written by Ryan Malosh, Assistant Research Scientist, University of Michigan
imageA woman eats ice cream at Gantry Plaza State Park, Long Island City on May 30, 2020 in New York City. All 50 states have begun to reopen after weeks of stay-at-home measures.Alexi Rosenfeld/Getty Images

With social distancing guidelines and mandates mostly lifted, people have begun to head back to beaches, parks and restaurants in many parts of the...

Read more: We may be safer now from coronavirus than we were three months ago, but we're not totally safe

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  1. A justification for unrest? Look no further than the Bible and the Founding Fathers
  2. How to protest during a pandemic and still keep everyone safe from coronavirus: 6 questions answered
  3. Why Hong Kong's untold history of protecting refugee rights matters now in its struggle with China
  4. Stripping voting rights from felons is about politics, not punishment
  5. Where are the African American leaders?
  6. COVID-19, smell and taste – how is COVID-19 different from other respiratory diseases?
  7. Here's a new way to do study abroad during the COVID-19 pandemic and beyond
  8. Scientists tap the world's most powerful computers in the race to understand and stop the coronavirus
  9. It can't happen here – and then it did
  10. Genetically modified mosquitoes could be released in Florida and Texas beginning this summer – silver bullet or jumping the gun?
  11. Low-wage essential workers get less protection against coronavirus – and less information about how it spreads
  12. California's early shelter-in-place order may have saved 1,600 lives in one month
  13. Parasitic worms in your shellfish lead a creepy but popular lifestyle
  14. Physicists hunt for room-temperature superconductors that could revolutionize the world's energy system
  15. Kids need physical education – even when they can't get it at school
  16. New Jersey's small, networked dairy farms are a model for a more resilient food system
  17. Doctors can't treat COVID-19 effectively without recognizing the social justice aspects of health
  18. In Brazil's raging pandemic, domestic workers fear for their lives – and their jobs
  19. When it comes to reopening churches in the pandemic, Supreme Court says grace ain’t groceries
  20. Can the president really order the military to occupy US cities and states?
  21. George Floyd's death reflects the racist roots of American policing
  22. Militarization has fostered a policing culture that sets up protesters as 'the enemy'
  23. Americans' deepening financial stress will make the coronavirus a lot harder to contain
  24. How the Postal Service helped stamp identity on America – and continues to deliver a common bond today
  25. Mobile technology may support kids learning to recognize emotions in photos of faces
  26. Coronavirus deaths in San Francisco vs. New York: What causes such big differences in cities' tolls?
  27. India's coronavirus pandemic shines a light on the curse of caste
  28. Dying virtually: Pandemic drives medically assisted deaths online
  29. Opening up US will trigger more COVID-19 cases, but disease models suggest how to avoid a second peak
  30. From the research lab to your doctor's office – here's what happens in phase 1, 2, 3 drug trials
  31. Giving private schools federal emergency funds slated for low-income students will shortchange at-risk kids
  32. Coronavirus, 'Plandemic' and the seven traits of conspiratorial thinking
  33. Obamacare's insurance safety net protects many of the millions losing their employer-provided health insurance – but not all
  34. Does your AI discriminate?
  35. The lack of women in cybersecurity leaves the online world at greater risk
  36. Robo-boot concept promises 50% faster running
  37. Solar farms, power stations and water treatment plants can be attractions instead of eyesores
  38. How do Buddhists handle coronavirus? The answer is not just meditation
  39. How Little Richard helped launch the Beatles
  40. Death by numbers: How Vietnam War and coronavirus changed the way we mourn
  41. More than 1 in 5 Americans are taking care of their elderly, ill and disabled relatives and friends
  42. Who's in charge of lifting lockdowns?
  43. Megacity slums are incubators of disease – but coronavirus response isn't helping the billion people who live in them
  44. Prehistoric human footprints reveal a rare snapshot of ancient human group behavior
  45. What makes the wind?
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  47. Everyday ethics: Stripping puts me in close contact with others – should I go back to work?
  48. Delaying primaries helps protect incumbents as well as voters
  49. We designed an experimental AI tool to predict which COVID-19 patients are going to get the sickest
  50. A new type of chemical bond: The charge-shift bond