Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Research"


25 mentions found


China is on edge after Trump's talk of tariffs
  + stars: | 2024-11-29 | by ( Huileng Tan | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +5 min
AdvertisementOn Monday, Donald Trump threatened more tariffs on China, blaming Beijing for fentanyl. China criticized Trump's tariff threats, calling them ineffective and unjustified. "The excuse the president-elect has given to justify his threat of additional tariffs on imports from China is farfetched," wrote China Daily in a Tuesday editorial. AdvertisementMarkets are muted as investors wait and seeGlobal markets were jolted following Trump's post on Truth Social on Monday, but the effects have been felt mostly in foreign exchange. Global firms and Chinese manufacturers have already been diversifying their operations to manage concentration risks following Trump's first term and the COVID-19 pandemic.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, he'd, George Saravelos, Goldman Sachs, Wu Zhiqiang, Young Liu, Al Jazeera Organizations: Global, Deutsche Bank, Shenzhen Lingke Technology, Nikkei Asia, Apple, Macquarie Locations: China, Beijing, United States, Shenzhen, Thailand, India, Vietnam, Taipei, Al, Southeast Asia, Africa, China's
The Russian currency hit its lowest level against the dollar since March 2022 this week. The Russian currency traded at 114 to the dollar on Wednesday, its weakest level since March 2022, shortly after the Ukraine invasion began. AdvertisementA Wednesday headline in the state newspaper Rossiyskaya Gazeta read, "Panic attack for Russia's currency market." Other countries, such as India, have snapped up Russian oil instead, tempering the impact of price caps and other penalties. The collapse of Russia's Ruble (black) is a reminder how badly the EU failed on Russia.
Persons: Vladimir Putin, Putin, Gazeta, Russia Robin Brooks, XbOwqiABRd — Robin Brooks, George Pavel, Brent, Kathleen Brooks, Brooks, Trump Organizations: Analysts, RIA Novosti, Kommersant, Brookings Institution, EU, Russia Locations: Russia, Russian, Ukraine, Russia's, India
The Summary Ancient footprints discovered in Kenya belong to two different species of human relatives who walked on the same ground at the same time, a study found. The prints are thought to belong to the species Homo erectus and Paranthropus boisei. A newly discovered set of footprints in Kenya provides the first evidence that two different species of ancient human relatives walked the same ground simultaneously 1.5 million years ago. While both are human relatives, Homo erectus and Paranthropus boisei featured very different traits, and their fates within the human evolutionary tree took starkly different routes. Broadly speaking, Harcourt-Smith added, it has become increasingly clear that various ancient human species interacted across different habitats over the past 7 million years of evolution.
Persons: boisei, , Kevin Hatala, Neil T, Roach, erectus, ” Hatala, , Paranthropus boisei, William Harcourt, Smith, Louise N ., It’s, Harcourt, Craig Feibel Organizations: Chatham University, Harvard University, Lehman College, Stony Brook, American Museum of Locations: Kenya, Asia, Indonesia, Louise N . Leakey
CNN —In a world where the climate is increasingly hot and volatile, farmers are having trouble keeping their crops cool. A startup founded in the desert of Saudi Arabia thinks it might have a solution. Heat peaks can desiccate crops, killing them outright if unmitigated, or stressing crops, leaving them more vulnerable to pests and disease. A prototype farm in Bada, Saudi Arabia, uses SecondSky in polyethylene greenhouse covers manufactured by SABIC. Desertification is a pressing issue and will be the focus of the UN Convention to Combat Desertification’s COP16 in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, in December, as leaders seek to curtail an accelerating problem.
Persons: Derya Baran, John Keppler, , Mark Tester, Ryan Lefers, Iyris, Keppler, Armando Alvarez, Vincent Martin, SecondSky, Martin Organizations: CNN, King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, United Arab, Innovation, UN Food and Agriculture Organization, National Food Production Initiative, Sea, SABIC, Sea Global, UN Convention, United Nations Locations: Saudi Arabia, Iyris, KAUST, Egypt, United Arab Emirates, Latin America, Mexico, Europe, South Africa, Morocco, Spain, Bada, Bada , Saudi Arabia, Riyadh
“This exceeds the amount the State Health Plan spends on cancer, rheumatoid arthritis, and chemotherapy medications,” the State Health Plan said in a March statement. The health plan’s board of trustees eliminated coverage of this class of medications for weight loss starting in April. “They know diets don’t work long-term for weight loss, yet they are denying coverage for a medication that has been effective,” Blanchard said. But patients typically need to stay on the medications to maintain their weight loss, meaning they face long-term costs. Besides making the medication more affordable, he said, it should encourage the use of weight loss drugs and treatment of obesity as a chronic disease instead of stigmatizing it as a moral failing.
Persons: Anita Blanchard, Charlotte, , Blanchard, , , Biden, ” Blanchard, Donald Trump, Ozempic, Nishant Shah, Kody Kinsley, doesn’t, ” Kinsley, Kinsley, “ We’re, Duke’s Shah, ” Shah, Melissa Jones, , ’ ” Jones, Blanchard can’t Organizations: University of North, North Carolina, Health, State Health, West Virginia, Medicare, Services, Duke University, North Carolina Department of Health, Human Services, University of Chicago Locations: University of North Carolina, North Carolina, North, West, Connecticut, Carolina, U.S
The tariffs would be a significant escalation of Trump’s previous proposal, which was already a major increase on more targeted tariffs enacted during Trump’s first administration and kept in place by President Joe Biden. Canada is similarly considering its own options, including possible tariffs on U.S. goods, according to The Associated Press. America’s biggest import from Canada is oil — and any increase in energy prices would likely be felt throughout the economy. And in her statement reacting to Trump’s posts, Mexico’s Sheinbaum stated caravans of migrants were no longer reaching the border. And now he’s talking about tariffs to punish Mexico and Canada for not enforcing drugs and migrants across the border.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Trump’s, Joe Biden, Claudia Sheinbaum, ” Ernie Tedeschi, Biden, Corie Barry, , ” Barry, , Kayleigh McEnany, Dan Crenshaw, doesn’t, Steve Forbes, Mexico’s Sheinbaum, Douglas Irwin, mingles, you’re, ” Irwin Organizations: Yale, NBC News, Associated Press, America’s, Canada —, NBC, National Retail Federation, , Trump, ” Fox News, Fox News, Centers for Disease Control, U.S . Drug, Administration, U.S . Customs, Border Patrol, Dartmouth University Locations: Mexico, Canada, U.S, China, Texas
It’s misinformation about autism and mass injury that doctors and public health officials have disproven over and over again. Less attention has focused on the CDC, a public health agency Kennedy has long vilified in speeches and writings. In his 2017 speech, Kennedy criticized ACIP as a group of self-interested actors who base decisions on financial gain instead of public health. “The people who are on ACIP are not public health advocates,” he said. “We would know the answer to that question if we were given access to the vaccine safety database, but they’ve hidden it,” Kennedy said.
Persons: Robert F, Kennedy Jr, ” Kennedy, ’ ” Kennedy, Kennedy, Donald Trump’s, Donald Trump, Matthew Hatcher, Christ, Del Bigtree, Bobby didn’t, ” Bigtree, , , Paul Offit, Dr, Offit, ” Offit, , we’re, ACIP, William Thompson, Howard Lutnick, ” Lutnick, Dave Weldon, Tom Williams, Trump, Weldon Organizations: Centers for Disease Control, Catholic Church, CDC, Department of Health, Human Services, Democrat, Getty, Trump, Institutes of Health, HHS, Children’s Health Defense, Vaccine Education, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Drug Administration, RFK, FDA, AAP, American Academy of Pediatrics, American Medical Association, CNN, Capitol, Inc Locations: , Arizona, AutismOne, Black
A Chinese bank worker prepares to count a stack of US dollars together with stacks of 100 Chinese yuan notes at a bank in Hefei, east China's Anhui province on March 9, 2010. STR/AFP | Getty ImagesChinese authorities are contending with a weakening yuan as global investment banks forecast the currency to hit record lows, in anticipation of U.S. president-elect Donald Trump following through with his tariff threats. That would mark the currency's weakest level on record, according to LSEG data going back to 2004. Trump had already pledged 60% or higher tariffs on Chinese goods during his election campaign. The PBOC has been supporting the value of onshore yuan by capping the daily reference rate at 7.20 on the dollar this year.
Persons: Donald Trump, Morgan, Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, Trump, Jonas Goltermann, Kotecha, Wang, Ju Wang, Cedric Chehab Organizations: Getty Images, U.S, UBS, BNP, Barclays, Generale, Morgan, Macquarie Group, Nomura, ING, Oxford, Trump, Capital Economics, FX, Greater China FX, Reuters, BNP Paribas, BMI Locations: Hefei, Anhui, U.S, Asia, China
Mike Blake | ReutersThis report is from today's CNBC Daily Open, our international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. The SPDR S&P 500 , an exchange-traded fund that tracks the broad-based index, traded around 22.6% fewer shares than its 30-day average. In fact, traders boosted their bets that the U.S. Federal Reserve will lower rates by 25 basis points at its December meeting. "Today's data shouldn't change views of the likely path for disinflation, however bumpy," said David Alcaly, lead macroeconomic strategist at Lazard Asset Management.
Persons: TKWY, Mike Blake, David Alcaly, Scott Helfstein, Chris Verrone, , Jeff Cox, Scott Schnipper, Alex Harring, Sean Conlon Organizations: Reuters, CNBC, Dow Jones, Big, Nasdaq, U.S . Federal, Lazard Asset Management Locations: Encinitas , California, U.S, Big Tech
This surge means that coffee prices across the board — from fancy beverages made from Arabica beans to robusta-fueled instant coffee — are almost sure to cost more for the everyday consumer. On Wednesday, the global benchmark for arabica coffee — March 2025 arabica coffee futures — ended 4.6% higher on the Intercontinental Exchange (ICE) at $3.2305 per pound, after hitting their highest level since 1977. Food giant Nestlé, the world's largest coffee maker, said last week that it will hike prices to deal with the rise in coffee prices. Coffee drinkers are already paying more: Data from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics show coffee prices for urban consumers rose sharply from July 2021 to February 2023. Speculators jumping into the coffee marketGiven the confluence of factors pushing up coffee prices, non-commercial speculators, such as funds, are joining the market.
Persons: arabica —, Jason Miller, Guilherme Morya, Morya, , Christopher Tang, Tang, Donald Trump, Miller, Sucafina Organizations: Intercontinental Exchange, ICE, US Bureau of Labor Statistics, Michigan State University, Farmers, Reuters, Rabobank, Colombia —, UCLA, European Union, BMI Research, European Commission Locations: Brazil, Vietnam, Colombia, Honduras, Canada, Mexico, China, Trump's, Swiss
AdvertisementAs many Americans struggle with a high cost of living, Gen X is in a particularly tight spot. Gen X has the highest income of all but also the highest debt. As a Bank of America Institute research note said, Gen X has seen its discretionary spending drop the most of all generations. The analysis attributed that, in part, to Gen Xers trying to sock away more for retirement and investing more. AdvertisementBut as Bank of America notes, Gen X is in the "sandwich" phase of life: Some are juggling supporting adult children and older relatives.
Persons: X, Gen X, Xers —, they're, Xers, Gen Xers, I'm, Wendy Graham, Barbara Lose, Graham, who's, Xer Organizations: Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, Philadelphia Fed, Bank of America Institute, of Labor Statistics, Bank of America, University of Michigan's Locations: Philadelphia, Florida
Such tariffs have the potential to significantly increase the prices consumers pay on nearly everything that isn’t made entirely in the US, of which there are very few goods. And as we witnessed during the pandemic, “stockpiling by consumers can actually lead to higher prices in and of themselves and empty store shelves,” he said. That said, here are five items that are likely to get more expensive with any new tariffs Trump imposes that may make sense to purchase before he takes office. But if you need a new one – or will soon – now’s a good time to consider buying. E-bikesOne item that tops the list of things that could get spendier under Trump’s tariffs is e-bikes, Lincicome told CNN.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, Trump, he’s, isn’t, Scott Lincicome, , ” Lincicome, Ed Brzytwa, Gary Shapiro, , Corie Barry, Lincicome, “ It’s, Donald Trump Organizations: New, New York CNN, Peterson Institute for International Economics, Cato Institute, Trump, National Retail Federation, Consumer Technology Association, CTA, CNN, Locations: New York, Mexico, Canada, China, US
The US government is on track to force the app out on January 19, the day before Donald Trump takes office. There's a possibility that President Joe Biden could extend that deadline by 90 days, but he hasn't said he will. AdvertisementBut will a TikTok ban actually happen? While there is bipartisan support in Congress for a TikTok ban, support for a ban is fading among the American public. Some members of Congress have raised concerns that TikTok could be used as a CCP propaganda tool.
Persons: Donald Trump, Joe Biden, hasn't, Read, Amanda Perelli, TikTok, Matthew Schettenhelm, Trump, I'm, G.S, Hans, Nathan Posner, Getty Images Trump, ByteDance, John Moolenaar, Shou Chew, Chip Somodevilla Organizations: Business, Appeals, District of Columbia Circuit, DC, Bloomberg Intelligence, DC Circuit, Pew Research, Trump, Department, Congress, Cornell Law School, Washington DC, Anadolu Agency, Getty Images, Rep, Chinese Communist Party, CCP, Foreign Locations: TikTok, Los Angeles, Washington, United States, China, US
CNN —More than 1.5 million years ago, two different species of ancient human crossed paths on a lakeshore, perhaps locking eyes with each other. The researchers found 12 hominin tracks in a line, suggesting they were made by the same individual. “There’s one long trackway with 12 (hominin) footprints in it. We hypothesize that those more humanlike footprints are more likely Homo erectus just because the rest of their anatomy is so human,” Hatala said. Shown here is a fossil footprint hypothesized to have been created by Homo erectus, a species of ancient human.
Persons: CNN —, sapiens, , Kevin Hatala, , Neil T, Roach, Hatala, ” Hatala, you’ve, Harvard University Pristinely, couldn’t, Lucy, Louise N, boisei, bosei, Homo erectus, wasn’t, “ Paranthropus, Kevin G, erectus, Briana, Pobiner Organizations: CNN, Chatham University, Harvard University, Turkana Basin, Stony Brook University, Chatham University Hatala, Smithsonian National Museum Locations: Pittsburgh, Koobi Fora, Lake Turkana, Kenya, Ethiopia, Leakey, Turkana, Siberia
On Friday, the armed rebel groups claimed to have entered the city, which has been under government control since 2016. The Syrian military said it’s “confronting terrorist organizations” and claimed to have inflicted “heavy losses” on the groups since Wednesday. Wednesday’s surprise operation marks the first significant conflagration between Syrian rebels and the regime since March 2020, when Russia and Turkey mediated a ceasefire in the north of the country. The militant group, which was credited for helping save the Assad regime from Syrian rebels, is now significantly weakened, with most of its leaders assassinated. Iran’s proxy Hezbollah has been instrumental in assisting Assad regain territory lost to militias and rebel groups.
Persons: SANA, Hassan Abdulghani, ” Abdulghani, it’s “, , Assad, , Russia –, Izzettin Kasim, General Kioumars Pourhashemi, Abbas Araghchi, “ reactivating, , Dmitry Peskov, Ukraine …, Nanar, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Tehran’s, Syria’s, Iran’s, Hawach, Hassan Nasrallah Organizations: CNN — Rebels, Syrian, CNN, United Nations, Free Syrian Army, Anadolu, Getty, Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, Analysts, Crisis Locations: Syria, Aleppo, reigniting, , Idlib, Russia, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Iran, United States, Lebanon, Syrian, Gaza, Iranian, Israel, Ukraine, Brussels, Turkish, Damascus, Iran’s, Arab
AdvertisementIt's still a good time to embrace the AI revolution, according to VC firm Insight Partners. A recent Insight survey showed that 72% of its portfolio companies are using AI in their workflows. AdvertisementA recent survey by Insight showed that 72% of its portfolio companies are using AI, with 36% of them allocating new budgets specifically for these initiatives. Related storiesFocus on leveraging emerging AI technologiesThe idea of incorporating generative AI (GenAI) into companies can be daunting but it also has the potential to impact every function of a business. In a recent portfolio company survey, we found that 72% of portfolio companies are using Artificial Intelligence, with 36% of those companies creating a net new budget for those initiatives.
Persons: It's, you've, Organizations: Insight Partners, Business, Insight, Wiz
AdvertisementTrump has boasted about his chemistry with North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un. Donald Trump has long reminisced about the unlikely bromance he formed with North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un while president. His comments suggest that Trump will find Kim a much tougher and more emboldened character to deal with this time around. North Korea's Kim Jong Un and Russia's Vladimir Putin at a military parade in Pyongyang in June. "Kim likely sees in Trump a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to remake his country's relationship with the US, and thereby the wider world," said Chan.
Persons: Kim Jong Un, Kim, Donald Trump, Kim Jong, Kim hasn't, Trump, Jeremy Chan, Bruce Bennet, Kim overplayed, Bennet, Kim Jae, Vladimir Putin, Putin, Chan, Daniel Salisbury, Russia's Vladimir Putin, GAVRIIL GRIGOROV, , Ellen Kim Organizations: Trump, North, North Korean, Eurasia Group, Getty, Reuters, RAND Corporation, UN Security Council, South, Centre for Science & Security, King's College, Center for Strategic, International Studies Locations: North Korean, Korean, Pyongyang, North Korea, Russia, Ukraine, China, Asia, Hanoi, Anadolu, South Korea, King's College London, Trump, Korea
AdvertisementIn September, Katka Lapelosova took a solo trip to Greece. If she could do it over, she'd travel there with friends and rent a car. In September, I decided it was time for a solo trip to a Greek island to live out my "Mamma Mia" dreams. The author came across a lot of gap year travelers during her trip to Zakynthos. Understand the difference between beachfront and beach accessOne of the biggest things I'd change about my Greek island trip is booking a hotel that had beach access.
Persons: Katka Lapelosova, Mia, Rhodes, I'd, Organizations: New York, Colgate Locations: Greece, Zakynthos, Europe, New, New York City, Corfu, Katka, Athens, Taxis
Targeting Chinese chip equipment makers could benefit European firms such as ASML. The Biden administration is reported to be considering fresh sanctions against Chinese semiconductor equipment manufacturers, pushing up stocks of semiconductor suppliers in Europe and Japan. The suggested curbs would add an extra 100 Chinese chip equipment makers to the entity list, the outlet reported. AdvertisementAs part of the sweeping sanctions, the US could add 200 Chinese chip firms to its trade blacklist, Wired reported. American chip equipment makers and allies such as Japan and the Netherlands reportedly pushed back against earlier proposals.
Persons: Biden, SMIC, Jim Reid, Mao Ning, US Department of Commerce didn't Organizations: Wired, Bloomberg, Tokyo, Huawei, CSI, Deutsche, US Department of Commerce, Business Locations: Europe, Japan, China, Shanghai, Netherlands
His research, which hasn't been peer-reviewed, found that about 9.5% of coders were "ghost engineers.' AdvertisementMeasuring output is difficultDenisov-Blanch calls these workers "ghost engineers," defined as software engineers who are only 10% as productive or less than their median colleague. More remote workers were superstar codersMusk now aims to apply that same ruthless efficiency to the federal government. On one hand, he found that the prevalence of "ghost engineers" among remote workers was more than double that among in-person workers. But he also found that many more of the most effective engineers — employees whose performance was at least five times better than their median colleague — were working remotely.
Persons: hasn't, Yegor, Blanch, Paul Graham, Graham, Elon Musk, nobody's, coders Musk, Musk, Organizations: Stanford, Business, Software, Twitter, CNN, of Government Locations: Silicon Valley
But the owner of Twinkies and Uncrustables is predicting that nothing will be able to stop America’s insatiable hunger for snacks. “As it relates to anything in the political domain, we believe very strongly that snacking continues,” J.M. Food companies aren’t betting on Kennedy and the Trump administration to influence their businesses and Americans’ eating habits. Daniel Acker/Bloomberg/Getty ImagesSmucker believes that its food brands’ appeal and Americans’ craving for snacks will outweigh any changes Kennedy may bring. The brand includes meals high in protein and fiber that are “intended to be a companion for GLP-1 weight loss medication users and consumers focused on weight management.”
Persons: Robert F, Kennedy Jr, snacking, , Mark Smucker, Kennedy’s, Kennedy, Donald Trump, Kennedy “, ” Alexia Howard, Bernstein, General Mills, Kellogg, Kraft Heinz, Trump, ” Marion Nestle, Daniel Acker, Smucker, Biden Organizations: New, New York CNN, , Health, Human Services Department, Assistance, Pepsi, General, Trump, US Senate, New York University, CNN, Bloomberg, Getty, Research Locations: New York, Smucker, Tiskilwa , Illinois, U.S, Switzerland
They calculated each person’s Sleep Regularity Index (SRI) score, with higher scores denoting more regular sleepers. The team then tracked incidents of cardiovascular death, heart attack, heart failure and stroke over eight years and found that irregular sleepers were 26% more likely to suffer one of these events than those with a regular sleep cycle. Irregular sleep means the variations in the time someone goes to sleep and wakes up. However, it was an observational study and, as such, can only establish a link rather than cause and effect: we can’t know for sure if irregular sleep patterns caused the increased risk. But even those irregular sleepers who got the recommended amount of sleep had a higher risk of suffering a major cardiovascular event.
Persons: Jean Pierre Chaput, , , Chaput, Naveed Sattar, Attar Organizations: CNN, University of Ottawa, World Health Organization, University of Glasgow, Epidemiology & Community Health Locations: Canada, Scotland
A national CBS News/YouGov poll conducted last week found that 71% of people plan to avoid political discussions at Thanksgiving. Voss was among the dozens of people on social media who posted videos about how they are opting out of their family Thanksgiving plans. Van Bavel is director of NYU’s Social Identity and Morality Lab, which studies the dynamics of shared social identities. “There’s way more diversity among Republicans than most Democrats believe, and there’s way more diversity among most Democrats than most Republicans believe,” Van Bavel said. Jay Van Bavel, psychology professor at New York University“One of the biggest fears people have is being socially ostracized,” Van Bavel said.
Persons: Donald Trump, it’s, , Alexis Voss, Voss, she’s, , , Yale, Amanda Calhoun, MSNBC’s Joy Reid, I’m, , Jesse Watters, Elon Musk, Jay Van Bavel, Van Bavel, ” Van Bavel, ” Diana Rodriguez Wallach, Kamala Harris, Wallach, Jordan Williams, MAGA, Williams, Scott Walker, Walker, they’re Organizations: Trump, CBS, Fox News, New York University, Democratic, New York University “ One Locations: Ohio, Pennsylvania, Puerto Rican, California, United States
Mike DeWine signed a bill Wednesday banning transgender students from using school restrooms that align with their gender identities. The bill also mandates that Ohio schools cannot have restrooms or locker rooms that are open to all genders, excluding family facilities or single-occupancy facilities. Instead, it will make trans people less safe and fail to increase the safety of all students,” Antonio wrote. Ohio House Republicans attached the legislation about restrooms to proposals regarding report card data for Ohio’s college credit program for high school students. “Extremist politicians are panicking because transgender students exist," Willingham-Jaggers said.
Persons: Mike DeWine, , , Barbara J, DeWine, ” Jocelyn Rosnick, Nickie J, Antonio, ” Antonio, Christian Virtue, David Mahan, Mahan, Melanie Willingham, Willingham, Jaggers Organizations: Gov, Republican, Ohio Gov, USA, Associated Press, American Civil Liberties Union, Democratic, Christian, Senate, Research, Social, Ohio House Republicans Locations: Alabama , Arkansas, Florida , Idaho , Iowa , Kansas , Kentucky, North Dakota , Oklahoma , Tennessee, Utah, Ohio, Columbus
President-elect Donald Trump said he intends to nominate Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, a Stanford University professor known for his criticism of Covid lockdowns, to serve as the next director of the National Institutes of Health. In a statement Tuesday, Trump said, "Dr. Bhattacharya will work in cooperation with Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to direct the Nation's Medical Research, and to make important discoveries that will improve Health and save lives." Bhattacharya gained national attention in October 2020, when he co-wrote the "Great Barrington Declaration," an open letter calling on public health officials to roll back Covid lockdowns. Several days after the Great Barrington Declaration came out, 80 researchers from the fields of public health, epidemiology and more published a joint letter in the medical journal The Lancet, calling the idea "a dangerous fallacy." Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the director general of the World Health Organization, called the proposal unethical.
Persons: Donald Trump, Jay Bhattacharya, Covid, Trump, Dr, Bhattacharya, Robert F, Kennedy Jr, Kennedy, Jim O’Neill, O'Neill, Bush, Martin Kulldorff, Sunetra Gupta, Ghebreyesus, ” Ghebreyesus, Anthony Fauci Organizations: Stanford University, National Institutes of Health, Nation's, Research, Health, Department of Health, Human Services, Centers for Disease Control, Food and Drug Administration, Harvard, Oxford, World Health Organization, National Institute of Allergy Locations: American, Barrington
Total: 25