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Disease foundations that use a venture capital model get a stake in the breakthroughs they fund. Not everyone thinks that’s a good idea.
Technetium, a diagnostic workhorse, provides high definition images with minimal radiation. But it’s supply could dry up tomorrow.
Microscopic models—half living, half not—may prove more reliable than animals in explaining human disease and testing therapies.
Against all odds, a husband stands by his wife to fight the ultimate battle: cancer.
Although drug shortages have lessened in recent years, some key classes of medications remain in short supply.
Physicians routinely prescribe drugs for uses not approved by the FDA. But should drug reps be allowed to tout those uses?
With his creation of the American College of Surgeons 100 years ago, Franklin Martin introduced a vital aspect to surgery: regulation.
Nobel Prize-winning economist Kenneth Arrow discusses the current state of the health care industry.
There’s ample proof that physician empathy can benefit doctors as well as patients. Next challenge: teaching medicine’s softer side.
Issues of privacy and consent are scarcely slowing the race to build enormous, invaluable “biobanks” of human tissue and data.
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