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Silk’s strength makes it an asset in the medical field.
Scientists looking to block HIV’s evasions of the immune system found an unlikely source of inspiration: the spam filter.
A timeline of pivotal testosterone therapy events through history.
Researchers have developed a way to coax new blood vessels to grow with a specialized bandage.
Modern emergency care finds its roots in the Army of the Potomac.
A professor of medicine explains how medical students can learn the art of clinical reasoning from the hosts of NPR’s Car Talk.
Adept at saving lives, we need to learn how to let patients go, say three physician-essayists, who consider why a “good death” is so elusive.
The American College of Physicians’ new ethical guidelines has its members separating prudent cost controls from ones that may adversely affect patient care.
The use of 3-D models to track a patient’s pain has roots in a sixteenth-century sketch by a German master.
Lacking a standardized test to assess a baby’s health at birth, anesthesiologist Virginia Apgar created a simple rubric that persists more than a half century later.
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