Developing a Zika Vaccine – New York Times
03/21/2017
Developing a Zika VaccineNew York TimesTo tackle the problem, the United States government is working with a number of different manufacturers who are competing to develop a potential Zika vaccine. As part of this process, the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research has publicly offered its …
03/21/2017
Developing a Zika VaccineNew York TimesTo tackle the problem, the United States government is working with a number of different manufacturers who are competing to develop a potential Zika vaccine. As part of this process, the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research has publicly offered its …
In Pausing Human Research On Zika, Medical Ethicists Acknowledge A Dark Past – WBUR
03/21/2017
WBURIn Pausing Human Research On Zika, Medical Ethicists Acknowledge A Dark PastWBURThis was the proposal: Deliberately infect a small group of consenting adults with the Zika virus to learn about the disease and speed up the search for a vaccine. The need is clear. Zika is an emerging global threat to public health. The disease can …
03/21/2017
WBURIn Pausing Human Research On Zika, Medical Ethicists Acknowledge A Dark PastWBURThis was the proposal: Deliberately infect a small group of consenting adults with the Zika virus to learn about the disease and speed up the search for a vaccine. The need is clear. Zika is an emerging global threat to public health. The disease can …
Blood, Sweat, and Tears? The Presence of Zika in the Eye – Medscape
03/21/2017
Science DailyBlood, Sweat, and Tears? The Presence of Zika in the EyeMedscapeWith its recent downgrading by the World Health Organization from acute outbreak to a chronic problem, Zika has faded somewhat from the spotlight. Yet every day, we discover more about this virus. The frantic race to deepen our understanding of Zika is …Testing for Zika virus: There's an app for thatScience DailyLow-cost smartphone device seeks out ZikaNew AtlasResearchers at Sandia Labs develop device to detect ZikaKRQE News 13 (blog)NDTV -Infection Control Todayall 6 news articles »
03/21/2017
Science DailyBlood, Sweat, and Tears? The Presence of Zika in the EyeMedscapeWith its recent downgrading by the World Health Organization from acute outbreak to a chronic problem, Zika has faded somewhat from the spotlight. Yet every day, we discover more about this virus. The frantic race to deepen our understanding of Zika is …Testing for Zika virus: There's an app for thatScience DailyLow-cost smartphone device seeks out ZikaNew AtlasResearchers at Sandia Labs develop device to detect ZikaKRQE News 13 (blog)NDTV -Infection Control Todayall 6 news articles »
What is the Zika virus and how can it be caught? Symptoms, treatment and travel advice on the tropical bug – The Sun
03/21/2017
The SunWhat is the Zika virus and how can it be caught? Symptoms, treatment and travel advice on the tropical bugThe SunWITH people starting to think about their summer holidays to tropical climes, the Zika virus will be in the back of their minds. Zika has sparked a public health emergency with doctors warning it could, at least, cause fevers and vomiting – but at …
03/21/2017
The SunWhat is the Zika virus and how can it be caught? Symptoms, treatment and travel advice on the tropical bugThe SunWITH people starting to think about their summer holidays to tropical climes, the Zika virus will be in the back of their minds. Zika has sparked a public health emergency with doctors warning it could, at least, cause fevers and vomiting – but at …
The Latest On Zika: Microcephaly, GBS, Transmission, Prevention – Huffington Post
03/17/2017
Huffington PostThe Latest On Zika: Microcephaly, GBS, Transmission, PreventionHuffington PostMore than a year after being declared an international health emergency, the World Health Organization (WHO) deemed Zika no longer a public health emergency – an acknowledgement not that the outlook is improving, but that the virus is here to stay.
03/17/2017
Huffington PostThe Latest On Zika: Microcephaly, GBS, Transmission, PreventionHuffington PostMore than a year after being declared an international health emergency, the World Health Organization (WHO) deemed Zika no longer a public health emergency – an acknowledgement not that the outlook is improving, but that the virus is here to stay.