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Thirty years ago, the first test-tube baby made medical history.
Medicine’s debt to Framingham, Mass., is almost incalculable. And after 60 years, the famous study may be just getting started.
Far from replacing animal testing, computer simulation is leading to smarter experiments—and the need for more animals.
As a daughter discovers, her mother’s personality seems to drift, but she still can appreciate the important things: a wonderful sentence, the snow as it falls outside her bedroom window.
The radioactive isotope, used in some 20 million medical scans each year, briefly found itself amid controversy.
When the author’s macular degeneration worsened, physicians offered cold facts, not help. She had to find her own answers.
On the football field and battlefield, a better way to assess concussion damage.
Despite high patient demand, doctor bloggers argue that complementary alternative medicine may provide more harm than help.
In 1907, a surgeon and an intern discovered why cells sickle after they noticed something odd.
When controversy erupts over the safety of a drug, chances are, Steven E. Nissen is not far away.
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