House Plans To Vote This Week On Senate's New Relief Measure The Senate approved a bill to add roughly $484 billion in new funds to bolster the already record-breaking coronavirus response legislation. Senators passed the measure by unanimous consent Tuesday. Claudia Grisales
Afghans, New To The U.S., Go From War Zone To COVID-19 Hot Zone Afghans who helped U.S. troops back home in Afghanistan have ended up in the New York area with their families, and they're helping fight the coronavirus. Deborah Amos
Your stories of surviving Covid-19 – from the frontlines to sheltering at home KUOW's Ross Reynolds takes listener calls about getting creative during the crisis. Ross Reynolds
Health Crisis Is Taking Emotional And Mental Toll On Health Care Workers ICU nurse Jennifer Binstock, head of the American Psychiatry Association Dr. Bruce Schwartz and NPR's Yuki Noguchi discuss the mental toll the COVID-19 crisis is taking on health care workers. Yuki Noguchi
Philosophy Professor Helps To Solve Ethical Problems During Lockdown David Chan, a philosophy professor at the University of Alabama, puzzles over the moral quandaries listeners face during the coronavirus outbreak.
Health Crisis Is Taking Mental Toll On Health Care Workers, Continued ICU nurse Jennifer Binstock, head of the American Psychiatry Association Dr. Bruce Schwartz and NPR's Yuki Noguchi discuss the mental toll the COVID-19 crisis is taking on health care workers. Yuki Noguchi
National Security Adviser O'Brien Alleges WHO Is 'Propaganda Tool For The Chinese' Robert O'Brien said the White House doesn't know if money from China influenced the organization's decision-making, "but there are very few explanations for the way the WHO has conducted itself." Laurel Wamsley
After The ICU, Many COVID-19 Survivors Face A Long Recovery David Williams, 54, spent eight days on a ventilator after he got COVID-19. Weeks after being discharged from the hospital, he still needs an oxygen tube and a walker. Jon Hamilton
Germany Says It Has Identified The First Coronavirus Transmission In The Country German health authorities claim great success in testing and contact tracing, even pinpointing the country's first coronavirus transmission to the passing of a salt shaker in a Bavarian mess hall. Rob Schmitz
Already A 'Perfect Storm,' World's Food Crises May Double As Coronavirus Spreads Some 135 million people globally lived on the edge of starvation last year. The World Food Programme fears the effects of the virus could balloon that number to a staggering 265 million this year. Colin Dwyer