vaccine

People will do a lot of things for money, but getting a COVID vaccine seems to be one of the rare exceptions.
Any time I see the phrase "according to fact-checkers" in a headline, I can't help but roll my eyes.
A desire to stop the spread of COVID-19 misinformation has fueled increasingly intense efforts to restrict speech on social media platforms.
Vaccine skepticism comes in many different varieties.
Since January, billions of COVID-19 vaccines have been administered around the world.
Throughout the pandemic, we've watched the media follow a predictable formula in their COVID-19 reporting.
Protests erupted at California's state capitol earlier this week in the wake of Governor Gavin Newsom's proposed COVID-19 vaccine mandate for public school students.
The American public's trust in US media has cratered in recent years. Just “7% of U.S.
This year’s influenza (“flu”) season, which has already begun in some parts of the country, revs up in November, and last until spring, will be made more ominous than ever by the current high numbers of COVID-19 cases in many parts of the nation.&
YouTube triggered an uproar early last week, announcing that it would take “down several video channels associated with high-profile anti-vaccine activists including Joseph Mercola and Robert F.