Coronavirus

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Roseline Ujah, 49, sits on her bed in Umuida, Nigeria, Feb. 11, 2022. Doctors at a local hospital suspect her husband Godwin died of COVID-19, but there were no tests available locally to confirm their diagnosis. Many widows in Africa say the pandemic has taken more than their husbands: In their widowhood, it’s cost them their extended families, their homes and their futures. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)

Africa

All-formats AP team reports on COVID-19 widows in Africa facing hardship, abuse, stigma

MAY 20, 2022

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Medical workers collects swab samples from residents in a lockdown area in the Jingan district of western Shanghai, April 4, 2022. AP’s reporting revealed that Shanghai’s unconventional methodology for recording COVID cases and deaths almost certainly results in a marked undercount. official numbers calculates virus cases and deaths, almost certainly resulting in a marked undercount.China has sent more than 10,000 health workers from across the country to Shanghai, including 2,000 military medical staff, as it struggles to stamp out a rapidly spreading COVID-19 outbreak in China's largest city. (AP Photo / Chen Si)

China

AP uncovers the real reasons behind Shanghai’s improbably low official COVID death toll

APRIL 29, 2022

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Coronavirus

AP team tells the poignant stories behind ‘empty spaces’ as US nears 1 million COVID deaths

APRIL 22, 2022

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Danielle Mitchell, right, watches as her daughter, Brooklynn Chiles, 8, is examined during a follow-up visit at Children’s National Hospital in Washington, Feb. 11, 2022. Brooklynn’s father, Rodney Chiles, died of COVID-19 last year and Brooklynn tested positive three times. She is part of a National Institutes of Health-funded multiyear study at the hospital, looking at the impact of COVID-19 on children’s health and quality of life. (AP Photo / Carolyn Kaster)

Coronavirus

Rare access to children in long-term COVID study reveals daily challenges facing families

MARCH 25, 2022

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Customers eat at the Reading Terminal Market in Philadelphia, Wednesday, Feb. 16, 2022, after Philadelphia city officials lifted the city’s vaccine mandate for indoor establishments that serve food and drink, but an indoor mask mandate remained in place. AP has reported exclusively that data modeling shows 73% of the country is believed to be protected from omicron and that future spikes will likely require much less — if any — dramatic disruption in the U.S. (AP Photo / Matt Rourke)

Coronavirus

Source work, reporting, exclusive data modeling put AP ahead on omicron immunity

FEB. 25, 2022

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Virginia Mavhunga, a 13-year-old teenage mother, holds her child in her rural home in Murehwa, 80 kilometres (50 miles) northeast of Zimbabwe’s capital Harare, Nov. 12, 2021. Virginia, part of a steep increase in pregnancies among girls and teenagers in Zimbabwe and other southern African countries during the pandemic, dropped out of school after becoming pregnant in a community yet to adjust to the sight of a pregnant girl in school uniform. (AP Photo / Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi)

Africa

Sensitive reporting, compelling storytelling on spike in Zimbabwe teen pregnancy amid pandemic

JAN. 21, 2022

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FILE - Robert F. Kennedy Jr. speaks at a rally outside the Albany County Courthouse in Albany, N.Y., Aug. 14, 2019, following a hearing about vaccine religious exemptions. An AP investigation finds that Kennedy’s organization, Children’s Health Defense, has raked in money and followers as Kennedy used his star power as a member of one of America’s most famous families to open doors, raise money and lend his group credibility while spreading misinformation about COVID vaccines. (AP Photo/Hans Pennink, File)

Anti-vaccine

Tenacious reporting examines soaring influence, funding of RFK Jr.’s anti-vaccine group

DEC. 24, 2021

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In this Friday, Oct. 1, 2021 photo, from left, Zihare Wellons, 7, Shahif Wellons, 12, and Janiyah Acie, 3 Children walk through a new Rec2Tech space at Jefferson Recreation Center in Pittsbburgh, Oct. 1, 2021. The facility will provide access to technology and innovative programming for community members including STEM, computer science and coding education, combined with the arts. Although Pittsburgh has yet to use any of its funding from the American Rescue Plan, passed by Congress last spring, the city says it plans to use some of the money to expand these programs. It also plans to buy 78 electric vehicles, build technology labs and launch a pilot project paying 100 low-income Black women $500 a month for two years to test the merits of a guaranteed income program.(AP Photo / Rebecca Droke)

American Rescue Plan

Accounting and Accountability: AP follows the money, finds most ‘rescue’ funds unspent

OCT. 8, 2021

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This undated photo provided by the California Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control shows a fraudulent COVID-19 vaccination card. A Northern California bar owner was arrested on suspicion of selling fake COVID-19 vaccination cards to several undercover state agents for $20 each. After receiving a tip, undercover agents with the California Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control went to Old Corner Saloon in the city of Clements several times in April and bought fake laminated vaccination cards, officials said. (California Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control via AP)

College students

AP finds colleges concerned as some students turn to counterfeit vaccine cards

AUG. 20, 2021

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Tshimologo Bonolo, 8, poses for a photograph at her house in Soweto, South Africa, Saturday, June 26, 2021. She lost her father to COVID-19 in July 2020, and is now looked after by her mother and her grandmother. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)

Coronavirus

Only on AP: Heartrending images capture children across the globe who lost parents to COVID

JULY 16, 2021

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In this photo created with an in-camera multiple exposure, Registered nurse Cathy Cullen, part of the first group of nurses who had been treating coronavirus patients in the hospital’s intensive care unit, poses for an in-camera multiple exposure in the empty COVID-19 ICU at Providence Mission Hospital in Mission Viejo, Calif., April 6, 2021. Cullen sometimes tears up when thinking about what she and the other nurses endured. “The birth of my children and marriage aside, being a part of this team, this endeavor, and this pandemic is by far the greatest, worst, most rewarding, most painful thing I have ever done in my life,” she says. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

Coronavirus

A photographer’s unique vision merges past and present for front-line nurses

JULY 2, 2021

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Jerry Ramos is remembered with a collection displayed at his home in Watsonville, Calif., June 6, 2021. A father and essential worker, Ramos died Feb. 15 at age 32, becoming one of more than 600,000 Americans who have perished in the pandemic — and an example of COVID-19’s strikingly uneven and ever-shifting toll on the nation’s racial and ethnic groups. Latinos between 30 and 39 have died at five times the rate of white people in the same age group.(AP Photo / Nic Coury)

Coronavirus

AP marks 600,000-death milestone with distinctive data-driven look at COVID racial inequality

JUNE 25, 2021

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