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Robert Barron, who once created masks for CIA agents, now uses his talent for a different purpose: bringing people disfigured by trauma and disease out from hiding.
An everyday doctor’s device, the stethoscope, has its roots in preserving propriety.
During surgery, dozens of sponges are placed in the body. One company wants to ensure that they all make it out.
Doctoring for Kenneth Kamler isn’t limited to his office in New York—or the Amazon rainforest, or the mountains of Bhutan, or even the reaches of space.
Disappearing ink could allow tattoo removal without the scars.
The author explains the connection between her appearance on Late Night with David Letterman and the problem of unsupervised drug-taking by the elderly.
As more people receive joint implants, one company hopes to make a synthetic bone that works with the body, not against it.
Debora Spar of the Harvard Business School argues that new medical technology can’t go unregulated forever.
Once a last resort for the severely depressed, electroconvulsive therapy has been joined by a new generation of less shocking alternatives.
Why do scrubs look they way they do?
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