
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
As the coronavirus pandemic brings the country to a standstill, David Remnick and New Yorker writers examine the scope of the damage—emotional, physical, and economic. Remnick speaks with a medical ethicist about the painful decisions that medical workers must make when ventilators and hospital beds run out; John Cassidy assesses how the economic damage will compare to the Great Depression; and an E.R. doctor describes her fear for her safety in treating the onslaught of COVID-19 without adequate supplies.
4.2
54955,495 ratings
As the coronavirus pandemic brings the country to a standstill, David Remnick and New Yorker writers examine the scope of the damage—emotional, physical, and economic. Remnick speaks with a medical ethicist about the painful decisions that medical workers must make when ventilators and hospital beds run out; John Cassidy assesses how the economic damage will compare to the Great Depression; and an E.R. doctor describes her fear for her safety in treating the onslaught of COVID-19 without adequate supplies.
9,115 Listeners
3,851 Listeners
90,718 Listeners
38,148 Listeners
3,313 Listeners
3,936 Listeners
497 Listeners
10,684 Listeners
2,097 Listeners
27,504 Listeners
111,562 Listeners
2,304 Listeners
32,384 Listeners
6,737 Listeners
15,174 Listeners
1,451 Listeners
579 Listeners