Jen Schwartz

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Jen Schwartz

Jen Schwartz

@JenLSchwartz

Senior features editor @sciam covering how we're adapting (or not!) to a rapidly changing world

New York Sumali Mart 2009
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Jen Schwartz
Jen Schwartz@JenLSchwartz·
I wrote about a NJ town that is pioneering a radical strategy to adapt to rising seas. Also featuring: the West Antarctic ice sheet, nature as infrastructure, and the force of individuals and community amid the overwhelming complexity of climate change scientificamerican.com/article/surren…
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Prof. Akiko Iwasaki
Prof. Akiko Iwasaki@VirusesImmunity·
We need your help for some crucial #LongCOVID research! If you live in the New York area, have FULLY recovered from COVID-19 infection and it has been AT LEAST 12 weeks since you were first sick, please email us at prcovid@mountsinai.org  @PutrinoLab RT highly appreciated 🙏🏼
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Scientific American
Scientific American@sciam·
Two years into the pandemic, experts reflect on what the virus has done to science and society— what we’ve learned, what can’t be undone and how to move forward. Read our March issue: bit.ly/3gSxnT6
Scientific American tweet media
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Roxanne Khamsi
Roxanne Khamsi@rkhamsi·
My latest feature story is part of a huge special issue of @SciAm that delves into 21 ways COVID changed the world. I'm totally grateful to @JenLSchwartz for her brilliant edits. Check out all of the fantastic reporting here: scientificamerican.com/report/how-cov…
Roxanne Khamsi@rkhamsi

Have you ever waited for PCR test results? My new feature for @SciAm is all about how PCR is speeding up and getting cheaper. Scientists are using everything from left-handed DNA to solar power to long stretches of tape to radically improve PCR testing: scientificamerican.com/article/the-pa…

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Roxanne Khamsi
Roxanne Khamsi@rkhamsi·
Have you ever waited for PCR test results? My new feature for @SciAm is all about how PCR is speeding up and getting cheaper. Scientists are using everything from left-handed DNA to solar power to long stretches of tape to radically improve PCR testing: scientificamerican.com/article/the-pa…
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Scientific American
Scientific American@sciam·
COVID accelerated the development of cutting-edge PCR tests—and made the need for them urgent. #Echobox=1645028441" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">scientificamerican.com/article/the-pa…
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Scientific American
Scientific American@sciam·
Two years into the pandemic, long COVID remains one of the biggest threats it poses. #Echobox=1645036958" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">scientificamerican.com/article/covid-…
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Scientific American
Scientific American@sciam·
When COVID-19 hit, relying on our immediate networks was not sufficient. The fallout from the pandemic is an urgent call to strengthen our aid systems. #Echobox=1644956936" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">scientificamerican.com/article/how-a-…
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Prof Michael E. Mann
Prof Michael E. Mann@MichaelEMann·
Must-read new @SciAm article by @past_is_future, @STWorg & @StuartjdNeil drilling down on conspiratorial ideation over supposed Chinese lab leak origin to COVID-19 and the parallels with climate denial conspiracy theories. 🧵
Dr. Angela Rasmussen@angie_rasmussen

Really fantastic piece from @stuartjdneil, @past_is_future, and @STWorg. Yes, all reasonable origins hypotheses should be investigated. But amplifying baseless speculation hurts our ability to do exactly that.

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Jen Schwartz
Jen Schwartz@JenLSchwartz·
We made an entire issue of @sciam about how COVID has changed the world—and how it hasn't. Dozens of experts and writers reflected on our two pandemic years to help us see why there's no "going back" to 2019, and where we go from here scientificamerican.com/report/how-cov…
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Dr. Angela Rasmussen
Dr. Angela Rasmussen@angie_rasmussen·
Really fantastic piece from @stuartjdneil, @past_is_future, and @STWorg. Yes, all reasonable origins hypotheses should be investigated. But amplifying baseless speculation hurts our ability to do exactly that.
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