DiDonato and her best friend Christina Uribe, a Google executive, have spent years going down skincare spirals in the hopes of finding the perfect skin care routine. We both fell prey to the notion that to have healthy, glowing skin you need a 10 or 11-step skincare routine, notes Uribe. As skincare obsession has reached its peak on the internet, so has confusion around what to use, when to use it, and whether or not it plays nicely with the other products in your routine.
With Covey Skin, the pair are hoping to simplify our skincare routines down to just three derm-approved (and presumably Youtube-approved) products. Out today, Covey skin consists of the First of All Cleanser, Next Up Vitamin C Serum, and Last But Not Least Moisturizer designed for all skin types. They partnered with dermatologist Dr. Julia Russak on the gentle, clean, and fragrance-free formulas.
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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.