Media Coverage

Media articles featuring INFORMS members in the news.

Most Recent Media Coverage

Topic
Why is Maryland's COVID-19 Vaccination Rollout So Slow? Some Cite Lack of Central Planning.

Why is Maryland's COVID-19 Vaccination Rollout So Slow? Some Cite Lack of Central Planning.

The Baltimore Sun, January 8, 2021

It was early Dec. 23 when 100 doses of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine arrived in Baltimore County, and by evening half had been given to health department workers and half to first responders. About 3,400 more Moderna doses arrived a week later, and 6,825 Pfizer doses arrived after that. They have not all been used, though appointments are scheduled to use many of them. “People have to understand, I can’t now just open a clinic and hope I get vaccine,” said Dr. Gregory Branch, the county health officer. “I have to plan once I know how much vaccine I’m getting.”

Making Sense of the Lagging U.S. COVID-19 Vaccination Effort

Making Sense of the Lagging U.S. COVID-19 Vaccination Effort

Hub, January 8, 2021

It's been three weeks since the COVID-19 vaccines began arriving at hospitals, clinics, and pharmacies. Operation Warp Speed—the U.S. vaccination development, testing, and distribution effort—had made 20 million vaccine doses available by the end of 2020. Yet the U.S. is only approaching 5.5 million vaccines administered so far. Public health experts, policymakers, and the leaders of Operation Warp Speed agree: The U.S. must pick up the pace of vaccination.

A Look at the Logistics Behind the Coronavirus Vaccine Rollout

A Look at the Logistics Behind the Coronavirus Vaccine Rollout

CBS News, January 11, 2021

Julie Swann, department head of Industrial and Systems Engineering at North Carolina State University, joins CBSN's Lana Zak to discuss President-elect Joe Biden's announcement to release more coronavirus vaccine doses and what manufacturers can do to increase vaccine production.

U.S. Covid-19 Vaccination Plan Limits Speed of Rollout, Supply-Chain Experts Say

U.S. Covid-19 Vaccination Plan Limits Speed of Rollout, Supply-Chain Experts Say

The Wall Street Journal, January 11, 2021

A sluggish rollout of Covid-19 vaccines across the U.S. highlights the challenges of a decentralized distribution plan that relies on states and localities to handle the complicated last-mile logistics of getting shots into people’s arms, supply-chain experts say. More than 22 million doses had been distributed to states and other jurisdictions as of Friday, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, while 6.7 million people had received their first shot by that point. The figures were short of the U.S. goal of 20 million vaccinations by the end of 2020, and communities and states were still reporting bottlenecks this month as they managed their inoculation programs.

Three Countries Have Pulled Far Ahead of the Rest of the World in Distributing COVID-19 Vaccines

Three Countries Have Pulled Far Ahead of the Rest of the World in Distributing COVID-19 Vaccines

Quartz, January 11, 2021

It’s a miracle of modern medicine that scientists were able to develop multiple successful vaccines against Covid-19, a disease that wasn’t even on their radar a year ago. But so far, the global effort to roll out these vaccines and distribute them to vulnerable people is off to a slow start. According to a tracker developed by OurWorldInData—a research partnership between the University of Oxford and the British non-profit Global Change Data Lab—three countries have vaccinated a higher proportion of their populations than the rest of the world: Israel, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), and Bahrain.

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Artificial Intelligence

AI Hallucinations? Two Brains Are Better Than One

AI Hallucinations? Two Brains Are Better Than One

Computer World, December 28, 2024

A number of startups and cloud service providers are starting to offer tools for monitoring, evaluating, and correcting problems with generative AI in the hope of eliminating errors, hallucinations, and other systemic problems associated with this technology.

Healthcare

Supply Chain

Port automation is a sticking point for dockworkers union

Port automation is a sticking point for dockworkers union

Marketplace, January 2, 2025

Dockworkers on the East and Gulf coasts could go on strike again in less than two weeks if they don’t reach a contract agreement with ports and shippers. Talks are set to resume next week, according to Bloomberg. The main sticking point between the two sides? Automation.

Climate