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Researchers identify nine new coronaviruses, all harmless to humans

Goal of the research is to allow medical crews to spot viral infections before they become pandemics

Cambridge , Cambridgeshire , United-kingdom , Canada , Nanaimo , British-columbia , Utah , United-states , Jeff-taylor , Artem-babaian , Gordon-mcintyre , Google

The Oxford vaccine: the trials and tribulations of a world-saving jab

Amid bemusement from scientists at the deluge of often undeserved criticism, the Guardian pieces together the story behind the vaccine’s successes and failures

Germany , New-york , United-states , United-kingdom , Belgium , Italy , Portugal , Sweden , Austria , Russia , France , London

'It's not gonna go well': Hotez talks rodeo hopes, the need for vaccines and a looming winter surge


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Peter Hotez, co-director of Texas Children's Hospitals Center for Vaccine Development, poses for a photograph outside the lab Thursday, June 18, 2020, in Houston.Yi-Chin Lee, Houston Chronicle / Staff photographer
New vaccines are on the horizon — but is it too late to blunt the pandemic’s winter surge? Might Houston fare better than the rest of Texas? And why could a traditional-method vaccine be better for kids?
To answer these questions, we once again check in with vaccine researcher Peter Hotez, one of the country’s best explainers of COVID-19 science. He’s a professor and dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine, and he co-directs the Texas Children’s Hospital Center for Vaccine Development, where his lab team is developing COVID-19 vaccines.

Jennie-sealy-hospital , Texas , United-states , Montgomery-county , El-paso , Fort-worth , United-kingdom , East-bernard , China , North-channel , Washington , Harris-county

'It's not gonna go well': New COVID vaccines won't be enough to halt winter surge, Hotez says


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Peter Hotez, co-director of Texas Children's Hospitals Center for Vaccine Development, poses for a photograph outside the lab Thursday, June 18, 2020, in Houston.Yi-Chin Lee, Houston Chronicle / Staff photographer
New vaccines are on the horizon — but is it too late to blunt the pandemic’s winter surge? Might Houston fare better than the rest of Texas? And why could a traditional-method vaccine be better for kids?
To answer these questions, we once again check in with vaccine researcher Peter Hotez, one of the country’s best explainers of COVID-19 science. He’s a professor and dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine, and he co-directs the Texas Children’s Hospital Center for Vaccine Development, where his lab team is developing COVID-19 vaccines.

Jennie-sealy-hospital , Texas , United-states , New-york , El-paso , United-memorial-medical-center , Fort-worth , United-kingdom , White-house , District-of-columbia , China , Boston