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" ... But before Golde, Mouzon Wofford graduated from NYU with a psychology degree and no clue how to make her wellness dreams a reality. Like so many other recent liberal arts graduates, she started her career at a startup: working at a 20-plus person marketing software company in New York City, where she developed predictive marketing strategies for ecommerce-centric brands like Ann, Inc. and Teleflora. But she never lost sight of her passion for wellness, helping her coworkers soothe their aches and pains with herbal remedies and stave off colds with raw garlic cloves. After work, she and Kobori made their own elixirs, mixing cardamom and coconut milk into superfood latte powders. ... "
" ... How might the pandemic play out over the next 11 months of 2021? Will the rate of infection drop and remain low, or will we face yet another wave of increased infections and deaths come late fall and early winter? In other words, are we entering a period of prolonged or of seasonal population immunity? In considering these two possibilities, I look to three factors: the immune response to infection, the history of coronaviruses that cause colds each winter, and the emergent shape-changing proclivities of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that calls SARS-CoV-2. Our collective experience with both cold viruses and influenza acquaints us all with the concept of immunity that lasts but a season. ... "
" ... The open-plan office may no longer be as open when employees return to the office post-pandemic. This comes as no surprise, as many people who have kept strict quarantine during the pandemic found that they not only did not contract Covid-19, they also avoided catching colds and the flu. ... "
" ... When I first learned that Covid-19 was caused by a coronavirus, I hit the books and went back to its natural history. The most recent episodes, SARS and MERS, came and went after being successfully contained. But as I looked deeper into coronaviruses in general, I realized their tendency wasn’t to come and go. Quite the contrary, if you look at the human coronaviruses that cause a third of the seasonal colds we catch like clockwork, the same strains come back again and again—suggesting that coronaviruses, like influenza, might be capable of slipping past immunity acquired from previous infections and returning year after year. ... "