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A century ago, chemist Søren Sørensen invented what would become a crucial diagnostic tool: the pH scale.
In his new novel, The Spirit of the Place, Samuel Shem explores what it means for physicians to meet high expectations.
Jack Szostak, Carol Greider and Elizabeth Blackburn win the Nobel Prize in medicine for their work with telomeres.
To save money and increase quality of care for Medicare patients, the government is considering denying payment to hospitals for certain procedures.
Medicina Curiosa, the first English-language medical journal, mixed the technical with the practical.
How an electrified, 660-pound behemoth became a common diagnostic tool: the ECG.
With insomnia drugs yielding bizarre side effects, sleepwalking has wandered back into public consciousness.
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.
A simple technology nets a decline in malaria incidence and deaths.
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