Start your research with medical journals. If the jargon is infuriating, universities, hospitals and government entities employ journalists who explain the research.
The CDC tackles all aspects of the virus.
The website is comprehensive, with information on how to protect yourself, how to spot symptoms and even how to create a household plan.
The World Health Organization's website includes research done on the virus: Report of the WHO-China Joint Mission on Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19).
The mission's aim was to "rapidly inform national (China) and international planning on next steps in the response to the ongoing outbreak." Scientists and medical practitioners pooled information. The report, published in February, recommended that countries with imported cases of the virus should "prioritize active, exhaustive case finding and immediate testing and isolation, painstaking contact tracing and rigorous quarantine of close contacts."
The organization has another publication of interest to researchers, Managing Epidemics: Key Facts about Major Deadly Diseases. Published in 2018, it offered accurate, if horrifying, predictions. Here's an example: "Given the effects of globalization, the intense mobility of human populations, and the relentless urbanization, it is likely that the next emerging virus will also spread fast and far. It is impossible to predict the nature of this virus or its source, or where it will start spreading. But we can say, with a high degree of certainty, that when it comes, there will be (a) an initial delay in recognizing it; (b) a serious impact on travel and trade; (c) a public reaction that includes anxiety, or even panic and confusion, and (d) this will be aided and abetted by media coverage."
Related:
Resources: Why is it called coronavirus?
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