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New studies aim to determine what consumers do—or don’t do—after they’ve had a mail-order genome test.
In 1849 Elizabeth Blackwell became the first woman to graduate from medical school.
Risk expert David Ropeik argues that despite constant headlines, Americans’ health worries are largely misplaced.
A simple technology nets a decline in malaria incidence and deaths.
The brain, it turns out, can heal itself, and adding stem cells could unleash that toper to treat Parkinson’s, stroke and even depression.
They work without employees, fancy offices or big incomes. But back-to-basics doctors cite one elusive perk: satisfaction.
Prototypes play well with humans, helping patients with autism and Alzheimer’s. But don’t expect an arm of such aides just yet.
Of every 300 people infected with HIV, one doesn’t get AIDS. Understanding this uncanny protection might help science imitate nature.
C. elegans, a 959-celled Nobel magnet, helped explain cell suicide and launch genomics, and could now revolutionize drug development.
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