RSV Vaccines Are Finally Here after Decades of False Starts
Decades of failed attempts have given way to several successful vaccines and treatments for the respiratory disease RSV
Tara Haelle is a Texas-based science journalist and author of Vaccination Investigation: The History and Science of Vaccines. Follow her on Twitter @tarahaelle
Decades of failed attempts have given way to several successful vaccines and treatments for the respiratory disease RSV
Your questions answered about what RSV is, how it spreads, what vaccines are on the way and who is most at risk
COVID shutdowns limited the spread of influenza in 2019–2020. Several factors could mean this season will be more severe
The FDA’s decision to expand eligibility for the Pfizer vaccine to young kids could mean less illness, safer school and more freedom
Pfizer expects to have safety and efficacy data on five- to 11-year-olds by the end of the month, but federal authorities must still review it
Those who were exposed to Ground Zero have increased rates of certain cancers and other health problems
Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine approval is younger teens’ shot at freedom
Immunization reduces the likelihood of a painful reemergence of the virus in kids
California coast visitors are now 91 percent less likely to be bitten by a great white than they were in 1950, in part because beach populations of humans have risen dramatically
Blood banks begin using the method in donations this summer as the northward spread of chikungunya continues
The thinner, oxygen-poor air above 2,400 meters may be among the environmental stressors that increase the risk of SIDS
Guidelines that emphasize the need for behavioral therapies often go unheeded, although study results broken out by demographics were surprising
The movement of proteins involved in neurodegenerative diseases could serve as a target for future therapies
Vitamin K injections, given after birth, can prevent potentially fatal hemorrhaging in infants, but anti-vax parents are extending their fears into a general rejection of all shots
Some parents delay vaccines out of a misinformed belief that it’s safer, but that decision actually increases the risk of a seizure after vaccination and leaves children at risk for disease longer...
CT scans may soon link human remains to missing persons
That’s the good news. Bad news: Half of drugs used in kids are still unlabeled, which is a problem because of the risk of improper dosing or usage
The shortcomings of the whooping cough vaccine may help explain the disease's resurgence
Several factors may be contributing to recent whooping cough outbreaks, but parents’ refusal to immunize their children is one
The DSM-5 broadens the criteria for anorexia nervosa, but will the expanded definition of the illness help catch those who need help before their disease progresses too far?
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