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The US fails unpaid caregivers Policies like paid family leave can change that

The US fails unpaid caregivers Policies like paid family leave can change that
vox.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from vox.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Vox Adds Editor s Note to Article Dubbing Idea CCP Virus Started in Lab a Conspiracy Theory

Vox Adds Editor’s Note to Article Dubbing Idea CCP Virus Started in Lab a ‘Conspiracy Theory’ Vox on Monday appended an editor’s note to an article that claimed the idea that the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus originated in a laboratory in China had been “debunked.” “Since this piece was originally published in March 2020, scientific consensus has shifted. Now some experts say the ‘lab leak’ theory warrants an investigation, along with the natural origin theory,” Vox’s note stated. “Some language in this article was updated in April 2020 to reflect scientific thinking, but it has not been updated since then,” it added.

Northwestern Qatar hosts webinar on influence of data on journalism amid pandemic

Northwestern Qatar hosts webinar on influence of data on journalism amid pandemic  19 Apr 2021 - 9:14 Clockwise from top left: Pulitzer Center journalists Eliza Barclay, Charles Piller, and Youyou Zhou joined a Northwestern Qatar webinar on science journalism. The Peninsula Doha: In the midst of conflicting information that accompanied the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, data and science have played a critical role in advancing fact-based coverage, said Pulitzer Center journalists during a Northwestern Qatar webinar on science journalism. Pulitzer Center journalists Eliza Barclay, Charles Piller, and Youyou Zhou discussed how data analysis and data visualization in newsrooms have resulted in well-informed reporting of the pandemic.

The Pandemic Playbook

The Pandemic Playbook Dylan Scott © Ricci Shryock, Jacobia Dahm, Jun Michael Park, Linh Pham for Vox Senegal, Germany, South Korea, Vietnam (clockwise from top left). Before last March, the United States was considered better prepared than any country in the world to contain an infectious disease outbreak. Then came the novel coronavirus. The US response was slow, disorganized, and ineffective: The richest nation on Earth endured the most cases and deaths anywhere in the world, and it fared poorly even when adjusting for population. Chronic underinvestment in public health left the US struggling to set up a system to test for Covid-19, trace infected people’s contacts, and isolate those who were exposed. Government leaders resisted accepting the seriousness of the threat and failed to effectively communicate with the public. Hospitals in major hot spots scrambled to keep beds available. There were some successes: The US helped produce vaccines that shou

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