It's Good Idea To Double-Check The Outfit Before Leaving Home Dr. Vera Etches, Ottawa's medical officer of health, made it to City Hall before realizing she forgot to put on a skirt under her raincoat. The busy doc tweeted: "Yikes! Time for another break..."
Trump Often Gives 'Complete Opposite' Of Health Experts' Advice, Former Staffer Says Olivia Troye, who worked for Vice President Pence for two years, recently resigned from the Trump administration's coronavirus task force. Bill Chappell
988: National Suicide Prevention Hotline To Have A New Number NPR's Ari Shapiro talks with Sam Brinton, vice president of advocacy and government affairs at The Trevor Project, about the soon-to-be new number to reach the national suicide prevention hotline.
Juggling Financial Stress And Caregiving, Parents Are 'Very Not OK' In The Pandemic The pandemic economy is squeezing families with kids: 74% of those earning less than $100,000 report serious financial woes, in an NPR poll. Experts worry about lasting impacts on kids' mental health. Rhitu Chatterjee
'This Is Too Much': Working Moms Are Reaching The Breaking Point During The Pandemic The coronavirus did not create the struggles that working mothers face daily. But it has exacerbated them and made them more visible, forcing women of all income levels to make hard choices. Andrea Hsu
How A Beloved Gemstone Became A Symbol Of Environmental Tragedy In Myanmar Decades of mining for jade has left the landscape desolate. Local activists want to make a change — but can they stand up to the powerful companies that dominate the industry? Emily Fishbein
When Young People Get COVID-19, Infections Soon Rise Among Older Adults As college campuses grapple with outbreaks of coronavirus infections, research from the CDC suggests young adults are driving infection rates, putting older, more vulnerable people at risk. Will Stone
Scientists Experiment With TB Vaccine To See If It Slows Spread Of COVID-19 As scientists race to develop a vaccine specific for COVID-19, some researchers are testing an old vaccine, that's been proven safe and is cheap to manufacture, to see if it could slow the pandemic. Michaeleen Doucleff
More Than 600,000 Child Cases Of COVID-19 Reported In U.S., But Severe Illness 'Rare' In a survey of data reported by 49 states and four other jurisdictions, the American Academy of Pediatrics said the infection rate for COVID-19 is 829 per 100,000 children in the population. Mark Katkov
COVID-19 Deaths Top 1 Million Worldwide. How These 5 Nations Are Driving The Pandemic Nine months after the first reported fatality in China last January, the world has hit a sobering milestone. Nurith Aizenman