
Lexi Krupp
Reporter, Science & HealthLexi covers science and health stories for ¿ªÔÆÌåÓý.
Previously, she was a science reporter at a public radio station in northern Michigan and a podcast producer at Gimlet Media in New York City. Her work has appeared on NPR, Here & Now, and in Audubon, Popular Science, VICE, and Medscape. Krupp also worked as a science teacher, and once spent a summer tracking mountain goats for the U.S. Forest Service.
Leave Lexi a voicemail at 802-552-8899 or email Lexi.
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The hiring pause applies to all open faculty, staff and postdoc positions.
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The insurer has raised premiums on state marketplace plans by double digits for the past three years. Still, BlueCross BlueShield of Vermont said their premiums are not covering member claims.
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For many Vermont farmers, bird flu poses an especially serious risk this year, amid fears the virus could spread to dairy cattle in the state.
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Representatives of two Abenaki First Nations headquartered in Quebec spoke at the Vermont Statehouse about Indigenous identity theft, which they say is being committed by Vermont’s state-recognized tribes.
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The university gets coveted R1 status after nearly doubling its spending on research over the past decade.
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The state is monitoring for bird flu in dairy cows and people who are hospitalized with the flu.
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A majority of nurses at the St. Albans hospital voted to unionize this month following a failed vote in 2018.
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His leadership in Vermont through the COVID-19 pandemic and other public health crises "has been praised and celebrated," Sen. Peter Welch said in a statement Friday. Levine will be leaving the health department at the end of next month.
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Brave Little StateMost towns have one, but no two are exactly the same � and their stories are still unfolding.
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Almost nine percent of recent emergency room and urgent care visits in Vermont were due to flu-like illnesses.