Edited by Nils Chr. Stenseth, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway, and approved January 20, 2021 (received for review October 13, 2020)Coexposure to airborne pollen enhances susceptibility to respiratory viral infections, regardless of the allergy status. We hypothesized this could ...
Higher airborne pollen concentrations correlated with increased SARS-CoV-2 infection rates, as evidenced from 31 countries across the globe Read more

No article scores yet.

There are no critic or public scores for this article yet.
critic reviews: 0
public reviews: 0
No reviews
img-contested
N/A
critic score
0 reviews
img-contested
N/A
public score
0 reviews
img-contested
N/A
critic score
0 reviews
img-contested
N/A
public score
0 reviews
img-contested
N/A
critic score
0 reviews
img-contested
N/A
public score
0 reviews
img-contested
N/A
critic score
0 reviews
img-contested
N/A
public score
0 reviews
img-contested
N/A
critic score
0 reviews
img-contested
N/A
public score
0 reviews

CRITIC REVIEWS

There don't seem to be any reviews yet.

PUBLIC REVIEWS

There don't seem to be any reviews yet.