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Point: Yes, they are key in the nation’s efforts to develop a value-driven health care system. Counterpoint: No, because the wrong kind of measurements can do more harm than good.
Engineering students at Duke University created the BlueRay, which is being used experimentally on jaundiced babies in the developing world.
Thirty years ago, the first test-tube baby made medical history.
The radioactive isotope, used in some 20 million medical scans each year, briefly found itself amid controversy.
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.
The University of Calgary’s CAVEman, a computer-generated hologram, can display human body parts in ultrasharp resolution.
A solution to a sub-Saharan public health crisis is also…a merry-go-round.
Point: Yes, it will help prevent diseases; Counterpoint: No, it was inadequately tested.
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