Featured Story Johns Hopkins Medicine Leads Effort to Bring COVID-19 Testing to Hard-Hit Communities
Johns Hopkins Medicine is now leading an initiative to provide COVID-19 testing to hard-hit areas of Baltimore.
Johns Hopkins Medicine is now leading an initiative to provide COVID-19 testing to hard-hit areas of Baltimore.
The Chesney Archives invites all faculty and staff members, students and volunteers throughout the institution to submit their COVID-19 stories.
The approaches include using new metric-based criteria to determine the frequency of rehabilitation, telemedicine and negative pressure rooms.
Health care leaders from Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center host a twice-weekly conference call designed to debunk rumors, deliver reliable information and discuss resources available to underserved Baltimoreans.
The Johns Hopkins Health System is doing its part to sort the samples, prepare and test the genetic material, and deliver COVID-19 results.
The vice president for economic development for Johns Hopkins University and Johns Hopkins Health System works to make sure underserved communities have access to food, testing and medical information during the COVID crisis.
The COVID-19 Pandemic Anchor Strategy Work Group is fighting the disease's disproportionate harm to already disadvantaged communities.
Sibley Memorial Hospital donated 46,000 cloth masks to residents and organizations in Washington, D.C.
Catherine Wren was redeployed from a study on improving the health of people with serious mental illness to studies on COVID-19 at Johns Hopkins’ first field-based clinical research site.
Johns Hopkins Lifeline transport team recently surpassed a significant patient and staff safety milestone.
The database is helping bring equity considerations into the conversation about how to reopen schools.
The masks are 100% cotton and washable and will help slow the spread of COVID-19 among vulnerable communities
Students and trainees are starting an academic year for the history books, one with challenges galore but opportunities as well.
Former Osler assistant chiefs of service and a former intern share their experiences on how they adapted to the pandemic’s “chaos” and “uncertainty.”
This year, flu vaccinations are required for virtually everyone in the health system and school of medicine.
“Prediction model” can help hospitals forecast which patients’ conditions are likely to worsen.
Doctors use telemedicine and other care options to support patients during the coronavirus pandemic.
Learn about the new Johns Hopkins Medicine advertising campaign.
Johns Hopkins Medicine, together with 100 of the nation’s other top health care systems have come together with an urgent plea for all Americans — #MaskUp.
Johns Hopkins Medicine’s Office of Well-Being offers mental and emotional health assistance for employees facing the holidays with apprehension and anxiety.
“I went into it feeling strong and confident that we would get through it soon,” says Christelle Asu, who has been caring for patients with COVID-19 since March.
As a writer and editor for the Johns Hopkins Health System, I am confident that we will be safe. However, I am uncertain about what lies ahead.
Eligible faculty and staff who’ve chosen to be vaccinated against COVID-19 began receiving doses last week. The first vaccinations were administered Dec. 16 at Sibley Memorial Hospital and The Johns Hopkins Hospital.