Coronavirus: COVID-19
The Atlantic’s coverage of the coronavirus that causes COVID-19
The Atlantic’s coverage of the coronavirus that causes COVID-19
The balance between modern medicine and traditional treatments is shifting in the wrong direction in India.
How the pandemic is changing how we move—and could alter cities permanently
Why millions of students still can’t get online
The Great Depression permanently altered many people’s behavior. Could COVID-19 do the same?
Social gatherings provoke moral indignation—but bringing in law enforcement will promote injustice, not reduce infections.
The U.S. has never had enough coronavirus tests. Now a group of epidemiologists, economists, and dreamers is plotting a new strategy to defeat the virus, even before a vaccine is found.
The pandemic is bringing the sport face-to-face with its deepest flaws.
The Disaster Tourist, a grim satire of capitalism, resonates during a pandemic that has revealed the brutal calculus of “essential work.”
This is what the scramble to teach from home looks like.
Boris Johnson has faced his share of blame for the country’s death count. But the British system was failing long before the coronavirus struck.
One scientist started in the Arctic Ocean and ended up crossing the Russia-Finland border on a folding bicycle procured in Germany.
Is the pandemic changing science?
Sensing that they’re living through a historic moment, many people are journaling to create a keepsake of life during the pandemic.
The crisis in the United States shouldn’t distract from the worsening situation elsewhere.
When socializing outside gets harder in much of the U.S., daily life will get more dismal, and the virus might spread even further.
Which is too bad because we really need to understand how the immune system reacts to the coronavirus.
The coronavirus could change lingering cultural assumptions about what makes for a full and happy life.
No matter what happens now, the virus will continue to circulate around the world.
A cheap, easy excuse to be in nature
Alternative solutions to parents’ dilemma just require more time, money, and imagination.