Did Andrew Kolodny's op-ed on kratom in The Conversation make you see red? Well, it should. It's largely the same old ...
The simplest explanations are often the most appealing, yet they are also often the most incomplete. For a long time, it ...
It’s now been two years since Great Women of Science debuted, featuring women who have made notable contributions to science, ...
Modern medicine is improving in precision, identifying exactly who needs treatment and who doesn’t. In heart disease ...
That Israeli epidemic, transported by an Israeli traveler from the Ukraine, seeded America’s 2019 epidemic, which began in ...
A large prospective cohort study examined how different forms of cow’s milk consumption affect infant health during the first ...
In a recent episode of The Pitt- a patient comes in with jaundice, nausea, and a rapidly declining liver. At first, it’s a mystery. No alcohol abuse, no obvious illness. Then comes the twist.
Pesticides, Girl Scout cookies, food additives, and more—the list of allegedly harmful chemicals feels endless. And so does ...
It is with great sadness that I report the passing of Dr. Fred Lipfert, a member of our Board of Scientific Advisors, a constant contributor to our website, and a friend.
There’s a moment in every physician’s career when words begin to carry real weight. A casual suggestion shapes a patient’s ...
From a chatbot that refuses to delete its peers to decades-old promises of frictionless, jobless offices that produced more work, the future keeps arriving with less revolution and more irony. Layer ...
Policies that push drug use underground don’t make it disappear—they make it more dangerous. A New York Times article shows ...
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