Ultrastructural morphology exhibited by coronaviruses.
CDC/ Alissa Eckert, MS; Dan Higgins, MAM
Since November 2019, the novel coronavirus known as SARS-CoV-2 (formerly, 2019-nCoV) has devastated communities and overwhelmed healthcare facilities worldwide. Research on the virus, its epidemiology, modes of infection, and potential treatments has been rapid, providing new insights to guide both clinical practice and public health recommendations each day.
The ability to share discoveries quickly is at the heart of the preprint mission, and facilitating it has been central to the ethos of Research Square since its founding. At no time is this goal more salient or pressing than in times of public health emergencies. Here, we aim to provide the most recent Research Square preprints relevant to the COVID-19 outbreak and its wide-ranging effects on the global community. All content posted here is free to read and download, and we encourage readers to engage via comments and annotations.
Community Engagement and Local Collaboration: A Framework to Enhance Women’s Participation in a COVID-19 Vaccine Immunogenicity Study in Liberia
The first line. Study on population of caregivers in contact with epidemic patients in the Sahel, the case of SARS-CoV-2
Impact of single-use gloves on the five indications for hand hygiene
Portable UV-C Device to Treat High Flow of Infectious Aerosols Generated during Clinical Respiratory Care
Olanzapine for young PEople with aNorexia nervosa (OPEN): Results of a feasibility study
AI-integrated risk assessment pooling reduces cost of COVID-19 testing
Leveraging advanced microscopy and machine learning to better understand COVID-19
Internationally Educated Nurse Integration as a Strategy to Support Health Workforce Transformation: A Realist Evaluation Protocol
SARS-CoV-2 Spike Protein Exacerbates Thromboembolic Cerebrovascular Complications in Humanized ACE2 Mouse Model
Different Trajectories of Adolescent Mental Health Problems Before and Over the Course of COVID-19: Evidence of Increase, Decrease, and Stability