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Ishwar K. Puri

How the pandemic has driven us to up our game in research and teaching

Opinion | BY ISHWAR K. PURI | September 14, 2020
An emergency military hospital, pictured in Camp Funston, Kansas, U.S., in either 1918 or 1919, during the Spanish influenza epidemic. Just as cholera gave rise to modern sanitation and the Spanish flu spawned public health, the battle to overcome COVID-19 will inevitably yield new and beneficial knowledge, writes Ishwar K. Puri. Photograph courtesy of Commons Wikimedia
Opinion | BY ISHWAR K. PURI | September 14, 2020
Opinion | BY ISHWAR K. PURI | September 14, 2020
An emergency military hospital, pictured in Camp Funston, Kansas, U.S., in either 1918 or 1919, during the Spanish influenza epidemic. Just as cholera gave rise to modern sanitation and the Spanish flu spawned public health, the battle to overcome COVID-19 will inevitably yield new and beneficial knowledge, writes Ishwar K. Puri. Photograph courtesy of Commons Wikimedia
Opinion | BY ISHWAR K. PURI | September 14, 2020
An emergency military hospital, pictured in Camp Funston, Kansas, U.S., in either 1918 or 1919, during the Spanish influenza epidemic. Just as cholera gave rise to modern sanitation and the Spanish flu spawned public health, the battle to overcome COVID-19 will inevitably yield new and beneficial knowledge, writes Ishwar K. Puri. Photograph courtesy of Commons Wikimedia
Opinion | BY ISHWAR K. PURI | September 14, 2020
Opinion | BY ISHWAR K. PURI | September 14, 2020
An emergency military hospital, pictured in Camp Funston, Kansas, U.S., in either 1918 or 1919, during the Spanish influenza epidemic. Just as cholera gave rise to modern sanitation and the Spanish flu spawned public health, the battle to overcome COVID-19 will inevitably yield new and beneficial knowledge, writes Ishwar K. Puri. Photograph courtesy of Commons Wikimedia