2021 Carnegie Fellow to Study Long-Term Consequences of Epidemics
Kevin Thomas, professor of African and African diaspora studies at The University of Texas at Austin.
AUSTIN, Texas Before COVID-19, Ebola ripped through West Africa, then touched down in the United States in 2014. Now, one newly named Carnegie fellow hopes his ongoing research on U.S. and West African survivors of the Ebola epidemic will offer both insight and warning into what a future after COVID-19 might hold.
Each year, the Carnegie Corporation of New York awards fellows $200,000 for scholarly research and writing aimed at addressing some of the world’s most urgent challenges to democracy and international order. Kevin Thomas, professor of African and African diaspora studies at The University of Texas at Austin, was awarded for his research proposal to investigate the longer-term consequences of the 2014 Ebola epidemic in West Africa.
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Natrol® Launches Sleep+, A New Line Of Melatonin Products Designed To Plus Up Your Sleep
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Natrol® Launches Sleep+, A New Line Of Melatonin Products Designed To Plus Up Your Sleep
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Study Finds
Residents in this state dealt with more stress than anyone else in 2020
NEW YORK There is no question that 2020 will go down as one of the most stressful years in American history, but a new survey finds some states felt that stress far more than others. A poll of 12,500 Americans from every state in the union reveals residents in Missouri are more stressed out than people in any other state. On average, Missourians spend three hours and 18 minutes per day worrying due to stress.
The Show-Me State barely edged out Mississippi, where residents spend three hours and 12 minutes per day worrying, and West Virginia, which loses three hours and six minutes each day to stress.