HealthExec March 29, 2024
The past four years have witnessed major advancements in medical science’s drive to unravel the complexities of the human immune system. We have the COVID-19 pandemic to thank for much of the progress.
A good deal of the growth has come because the global health crisis hit and then hung around at a time when medical researchers were ready with sophisticated means of studying how and where the virus, SARS-CoV-2, struck and spread. And whom it sickened, killed or barely bothered.
More to the point, for the first time in history, medical scientists could doggedly pursue a pandemic in real time rather than retrospectively.
This week a senior journalist specialized in infectious diseases and global health examines several steps...