RESEARCH BASE
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10 results for "COVID-19"
X_5_29 — Epidemiology and Pandemics: Disease, Civilization, and the Biology of Outbreaks
Epidemiology — the study of disease distribution and determinants in populations — has fundamentally shaped human history, often more decisively than warfare or politics. The Antonine Plague (165–180 CE, likely smallpox)
X_5_16 — Telemedicine & Digital Health: Remote Care Revolution
Telemedicine — the delivery of healthcare services through telecommunications technology — has evolved from an experimental novelty (NASA's 1960s Space Technology Applied to Rural Papago Advanced Health Care project) int
X_5_08 — One Health: Human, Animal, and Environmental Health Interconnected
One Health is an integrated, multidisciplinary approach that recognizes that the health of humans, animals, and ecosystems is fundamentally interconnected. The concept — formalized in the early 21st century but building
X_4_10 — Telemedicine and Digital Health
Telemedicine — the delivery of healthcare services at a distance using telecommunications technology — and digital health — the broader application of digital technologies to health and healthcare — have evolved from ear
X_3_20 — Infectious Disease & Epidemiology
Infectious diseases have shaped human history more profoundly than any other biological force. The germ theory of disease, established by Louis Pasteur and Robert Koch in the 1860s–1880s, transformed medicine from specul
X_3_27 — mRNA Technology Development & Revolution
The development of messenger RNA (mRNA) therapeutics represents one of the most dramatic scientific success stories of the twenty-first century — a technology decades in the making that went from academic obscurity and f
X_3_21 — Pulmonology & Respiratory Medicine
Pulmonology encompasses the diagnosis and treatment of disease affecting the respiratory system — from upper airways to alveolar gas exchange. Respiratory diseases collectively represent the third leading cause of death
X_3_03 — Epidemic and Pandemic History
Epidemics and pandemics — the outbreak and widespread transmission of infectious disease — have shaped human civilization as profoundly as wars, technologies, and ideas. Ancient: the Plague of Athens (430 BCE, described
X_3_02 — Vaccination and Immunology History
Vaccination — the deliberate stimulation of adaptive immune responses using weakened, killed, or component pathogens to provide protection against infectious disease — is among the most consequential medical intervention
S_4_04 — Pandemic Risk — Ancient Plagues, Antibiotic Resistance, and Biosecurity
Pandemics have repeatedly reshaped human civilization, from the Plague of Justinian (541 CE, ~25-50 million dead, Yersinia pestis confirmed via ancient DNA) to the Black Death (1347-1353, killing 30-60% of Europe's popul
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