The Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security and its partner, the National Public Radio (NPR), have released findings from their second joint survey on the state of the national coronavirus contact tracing workforce.
The crisis is now: governors, health departments, hospitals, and other health care sector partners must take immediate action to save lives and fairly allocate limited resources.
The Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security at the Bloomberg School of Public Health announces the launch of CommuniVax, a coalition to strengthen the community’s role and involvement in an equitable vaccination campaign.
A bipartisan assembly of Governors representing 1 in 3 Americans issued support for a Call to Action to Defeat COVID-19 and Promote National Recovery and Renewal, developed and released by the COVID Collaborative, which includes the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security.
Changes are urgently needed in the U.S. criminal justice system to diminish the risk of COVID_19 transmission and provide the standard of care to those who have been infected with this disease
As schools across the country strive to safely return to in-person classes, a new report provides the first application of a detailed framework to provide guidance to America’s school administrators on how best to screen for, and stop or reduce the spread of, Covid-19 (SARS-CoV-2) in their schools.
The Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, alongside 4 bipartisan US senators and 3 former federal government public health officials have launched a new educational initiative: The Capitol Hill Steering Committee on Pandemic Preparedness & Health Security.
Gigi Gronvall, PhD, and Jennifer Nuzzo, DrPH, SM, briefed congressional members on the Department of Defense’s (DOD) response to the novel coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic.
The Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security released a new report providing an ethical framework for making decisions about allocation and distribution of a COVID-19 vaccine during the initial period when such a vaccine has first been authorized for use and is still in limited supply.
The Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security at the Bloomberg School of Public Health and its partner, the National Public Radio (NPR), have released findings from a new survey on the state of the national coronavirus contact tracing workforce.