EditorialRosario Recundez receives her fourth COVID booster at Mountain Park Health Care in Phoenix, Ariz. on Sept. 12, 2022. (Ash Ponders/The New York Times)
EditorialRosario Recundez receives her fourth COVID booster at Mountain Park Health Care in Phoenix, Ariz. on Sept. 12, 2022. (Ash Ponders/The New York Times)
EditorialRosario Recundez receives her fourth COVID booster at Mountain Park Health Care in Phoenix, Ariz. on Sept. 12, 2022. (Ash Ponders/The New York Times)
EditorialHow can a business traveler balance their employer?s request that they not wear a mask while meeting with an important customer, and the safety of their immunocompromised mother-in-law, who lives with them? (Margeaux Walter/The New York Times)
EditorialStacey Ricks is one of many immunocompromised people who have taken medicine into their own hands by getting unauthorized fourth or fifth vaccine shots. (Callaghan O'Hare/The New York Times)
EditorialCiara Brown, a junior at Fox Tech High School, who has two immunocompromised family members, in San Antonio, Texas on Sept. 16, 2021. (Scott Ball/The New York Times)
EditorialA patient, right, after receiving a COVID-19 vaccine at a vaccination site at Greater Emmanuel Institutional church in Detroit, on March 27, 2021. (Cydni Elledge/The New York Times)
EditorialDr. Andrew Wollowitz, the chief of emergency medicine at Montefiore Medical Center in the Bronx, quarantines at home in Mamaroneck, N.Y., April 5, 2021. (Desiree Rios/The New York Times)
EditorialDr. Dara Kass, an emergency room doctor, April 4, 2020, moved into the Four Seasons New York in Manhattan, hotel from her home in Brooklyn, because one of her children is immunocompromised. (Demetrius Freeman/The New York Times)
EditorialClark Hamel, who is staying inside because he is immunocompromised, at his fourth-floor apartment in Brooklyn on March 20, 2020. (Laylah Amatullah Barrayn/The New York Times)