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Healthcare after the coronavirus

June 8, 2020

Vol. 222 / No. 13

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Relatives stand next to the body of Raimundo Costa do Nascimento, 86, at his home in Sao Jorge, Manaus, Brazil, on April 30. According to the family, Costa do Nascimento died of pneumonia and had to wait 10 hours for funerary services to come pick up his body. (AP Photo/Edmar Barros)
Politics & Society Dispatches
Filipe DominguesMay 18, 2020

In an exclusive interview conducted over email with America, Archbishop Azevedo criticized Brazilian politicians “in different stances of power” who have “minimized the effects of the pandemic.”

Homeless outreach personnel assist passengers found sleeping on subway cars in New York City on April 30. New York has the highest income inequality among the 50 states, comparable to the inequality in the nation of Angola. (AP Photo/John Minchillo, File)
Politics & Society Dispatches

Death rates from the coronavirus have been highest in low-income areas, writes Robert David Sullivan. And according to one measure of economic inequality, the U.S. more closely resembles Latin America and Africa than Europe.

Photo: Gabriel Benois/Unsplash
Faith GoodNews
J.D. Long GarcíaMay 11, 2020

Helping parishes learn how to livestream. Writing letters. Youth ministry has changed during the coronavirus pandemic.

Politics & Society Features
Sr. Carol KeehanMay 29, 2020

We can no longer tolerate the serious problems that result from a broken and fragmented health care financing system.

Politics & Society Features
John W. MillerMay 29, 2020

How to expand health coverage while containing costs is one of the great unanswered questions in American politics.

Faith Faith in Focus
Shannen Dee WilliamsApril 23, 2020

Since the outbreak of Covid-19, I have thought often about Sister Mary Anthony Duchemin and the extraordinary sacrifice that she made to the church and community at large in 1832.

Arts & Culture Books

Are we right to tear down our institutions? Or do they have a role to play in a well-ordered society?