What has the pandemic revealed about the US health care system — and what needs to change?
Seven MIT researchers see lessons and opportunities for US health care.
Seven MIT researchers see lessons and opportunities for US health care.
In a Q&A, Charles Senteio discusses Covid-19 vaccine hesitancy among Black Americans and the “tsunami of inequity” accelerated by the pandemic.
Corning executive Mark Kurz SM ’95 leads a team producing vials for vaccine distribution.
Delivering vaccines directly to the lungs can boost immune responses to respiratory infections or lung cancer, study finds.
Experts say people are more willing to get the Covid-19 vaccine when told how popular it is.
Improved public health messaging to Black, Latinx, and other communities disproportionately impacted by the pandemic can increase Covid-19 knowledge and information-seeking.
MIT economist works to show how therapies can be allocated fairly; states are now applying the method in their efforts.
State grants approval for Institute to help in vaccinating approximately 50,000 students, employees, affiliates, and dependents.
Structural biologist Pamela Björkman shared insights into pandemic viruses as part of the Department of Biology’s IAP seminar series.
The capstone senior design class in biological engineering, 20.380 (Biological Engineering Design), took on its most immediate challenge ever.
Using this computational system, researchers can identify viral protein sequences that could make better vaccine targets.
By the end of 2020, a first dose was administered to every at-risk staff member of MIT Medical who requested a vaccine.
Curiosity-driven basic science in the 1970s laid the groundwork for today’s leading vaccines against the novel coronavirus.
Many years of research have enabled scientists to quickly synthesize RNA vaccines and deliver them inside cells.
Biological engineer discusses condensing the time taken to develop therapeutics down from many years to a matter of months.