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Now more than ever before, humanity needs to rely on science rather than fear-mongering, rumours, media hysteria, false news, and politics.
Everything we do is grounded in rock-solid science. Our popular UVC virus disinfecting technology works so well because the science behind it is totally reliable.
Thank you to New Scientist magazine for recommending a list of top class online, TV, radio content and books that you can trust to be truthful, honest, and scientifically accurate. If you’d like to know more of the scientific truth behind the virus that’s still changing our lives, still making our world difficult to navigate, still making the future uncertain, here are some great science-based recommendations for you.
Get the truth from the New Scientist Weekly podcast
New Scientist Weekly is a brilliant podcast featuring expert journalists from the magazine discussing the most important science stories to hit the headlines every week including, of course, the latest discoveries and statistics about covid.
BBC Radio 4 on covid
Radio 4 is home to The Jump, a fantastic series that delves deep into the way viruses like covid cross over from animals into humans then cause pandemics. The first episode looks at the origins of covid-19.
The BBC gets busy with top class documentaries
It’s a horrible trend, and the reasons behind it are shocking. Why Is Covid Killing People of Colour? This BBC documentary looks at why we’ve seen such high rates of covid-19 deaths in ethnic minority patients, revealing the UK’s underlying health inequalities. Panorama: The Race for a Vaccine is another treat from the BBC, this time examining the fascinating inside story of the development of the Oxford AstraZeneca vaccine. Then there’s Belly Mujinga: Searching for the Truth, a BBC Panorama investigation into the death of transport worker Belly Mujinga from covid-19, after she was coughed and spat on at work in London Victoria railway station.
Channel 4’s contribution
Over to channel Four for this one. Race Against the Virus: Hunt for a Vaccine is a Channel 4 documentary revealing the story of the coronavirus pandemic as told through the eyes of the scientists working on the front line.
The New York Times
Across the Atlantic, the New York Times is busy reporting on the progress of potential drug treatments – as opposed to vaccines - for covid-19, ranking them in order of effectiveness and safety.
Online wisdom-gathering via social media
Taking things online, the Humans of COVID-19 project, taking place in the UK via social media, concerns the real-life experiences of key workers on the front line.
An excellent Netflix series
Netflix is also getting busy with the science thanks to Coronavirus, Explained, a short documentary series covering the pandemic, humanity’s efforts to beat it, and how to manage its toll on our mental health.
Not-to-miss books on covid
COVID-19: The Pandemic that Never Should Have Happened, and How to Stop the Next One is a book by by Debora Mackenzie revealing how the pandemic happened and why it will happen all over again if we don’t behave differently in future. And The Rules of Contagion is about the developing science of contagion and the unexpected ways it shapes our lives. The author, Adam Kucharski, is an epidemiologist at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine so he knows all about how diseases spread, and why they stop.
Our covid disinfection tech – Informed by science
If you’d like to know more about our machines and how they work hard and well to kill covid, we’ll be delighted to discuss the potential with you.