The FDA’s authorization of a Covid-19 vaccine for children ages 5 to 11 on Friday made 28 million Americans newly eligible for the shot.

But in a nation struggling with vaccine hesitancy, getting shots into little arms may be the toughest challenge yet. nyti.ms/3bpaKTF
According to a survey by Kaiser Family Foundation released Thursday, scarcely one in three parents will permit their children in this newly eligible age group to be vaccinated immediately. Two-thirds were either reluctant or adamantly opposed. nyti.ms/3mrd5nq Image
Even vaccinated parents who approved the shot for their teens are unsure about allowing their younger children to be inoculated. Some question whether risking the unknowns of a brand-new vaccine is worth it when most Covid cases in kids are mild. nyti.ms/3mrd5nq
Nearly two million children ages 5 to 11 have been infected with the virus and 8,300 hospitalized. A third were admitted to ICUs and 171 have died. Getting young children vaccinated could be a game-changer for other reasons too, experts say.

Read more: nyti.ms/3mrd5nq

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More from @nytimes

31 Oct
Traffic stops are by far the most common police encounters with civilians. But the risk to officers has been overstated. The police and the courts presume danger. This has contributed to a series of seemingly avoidable killings across the U.S. nyti.ms/3pUreLV
Police officers have killed more than 400 drivers or passengers over the past five years who were neither wielding a gun or knife, nor under pursuit for a violent crime — a rate of more than one a week, our investigation found. nyti.ms/3Btgx5f
In case after case, officers said they had feared for their lives, and in almost every case prosecutors declared the killings of unarmed motorists legally justifiable. But our investigation found that evidence often contradicted the officers’ accounts. nyti.ms/3Btgx5f
Read 11 tweets
28 Oct
It seemed that everyone knew someone this summer who was vaccinated and had a breakthrough coronavirus infection

But new data sheds light on how common these cases really were, how severe they became and who was most at risk. nyti.ms/2XUEox7
Recently released federal data shows that even during the Delta wave, compared with the unvaccinated, fully vaccinated people had a much lower chance of getting Covid or dying from it. nyti.ms/2XUEox7
Unvaccinated seniors were most likely to die from Covid. While breakthrough deaths were rare, vaccinated people 80 and older had higher death rates than unvaccinated people under 50. nyti.ms/2XUEox7
Read 5 tweets
27 Oct
After 40 years, Abba is back with a new album and a stage show featuring digital versions of themselves from 1979.

The Swedish pop group is also risking perhaps its most valuable asset — its legacy. ​“You just take a chance,” Bjorn Ulvaeus said.
nyti.ms/3Bklj5d
Abba is back with new music for the first time in four decades. Have the group’s hits been the soundtrack to your life? Do certain songs take you back to moments of joy or sadness?

Tell us in the form here.
nytimes.com/2021/10/27/art…
Abba, le légendaire groupe suédois, sort le mois prochain son premier album depuis 40 ans. Que représente le groupe et comment leur musique a-t-elle compté pour vous? Envoyez-nous vos témoignages.
nytimes.com/fr/2021/10/27/…
Read 4 tweets
25 Oct
At the UN climate summit next week, the focus will be on one crucial number: How many degrees hotter will the Earth get? And how do we keep that as low as possible?

Here's what's been done so far — and why scientists say far more drastic action is needed. nyti.ms/3pJuaLg
In 2014, before the Paris climate agreement, the world was on track to heat up nearly 4 degrees Celsius (7.2 degrees Fahrenheit) by the end of the century. That outcome was widely seen as catastrophic. nyti.ms/3pJuaLg
Now, thanks to rapid growth in clean energy, humanity has started to bend the emissions curve.

Current policies put us on pace for roughly 3 degrees Celsius of warming by 2100 — a better result, but still devastating. nyti.ms/3pJuaLg
Read 6 tweets
25 Oct
Exclusive: The gravest problem with the way Amazon treats employees may be one you’ve never heard of. As the company hit record profits, it fired and underpaid employees who sought leaves for medical issues, new parenthood and life crises.
nyti.ms/3B9L5c5
A year ago, Tara Jones, an Amazon warehouse worker, looked at her paycheck and noticed she was underpaid by a significant chunk: $90 out of $540.

The mistake kept repeating after she reported it. She grew so exasperated she wrote an email to Jeff Bezos.
nyti.ms/3jAblX3
Her message triggered an internal investigation and a discovery: Jones was far from alone. Amazon had been short-changing new parents, patients dealing with medical crises and other vulnerable workers on leave, according to a confidential report. nyti.ms/3jAblX3
Read 9 tweets
25 Oct
Facebook's foundational features, including its Like and share buttons, helped attract billions of people to the platform. But internal documents show the company repeatedly grappling with what it created — and reckoning with the consequences.
nyti.ms/3Gj4oDO
Many of Facebook's findings about its key features have been far from positive, the documents show. Researchers discussed hate speech and misinformation on the platform, and said it was the basics of how the product worked that let that content flourish. nyti.ms/3bafUTo
It may be difficult for Facebook to simply tweak itself to become a healthier social network, especially when so many problems trace back to key features, said a senior fellow at the Harvard Kennedy Shorenstein Center who studies misinformation.
nyti.ms/3bafUTo
Read 4 tweets

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