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With their online Journal of Negative Results in Biomedicine, editors Christian Pfeffer and Bjorn R. Olsen are encouraging physicians to re-evaluate clinical practices based on negative data.
Eric Chivian, founder of the Center for Health and the Global Environment, worries that some medical mysteries may remain forever unsolved as a result of global climate change.
As Elliott Fisher of the Dartmouth Atlas Project has discovered, more money does not always mean better health care.
When controversy erupts over the safety of a drug, chances are, Steven E. Nissen is not far away.
Photographer Max Aguilera-Hellweg’s most demanding assignment was one he gave himself: to understand doctors not by taking their pictures but by becoming one.
Marianne J. Legato, founder of the field of gender-specific medicine, is only beginning to uncover how different the sexes are.
Transplant surgeon Amy Friedman argues: Since we can’t get enough organs for free, why not pay for them?
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.
Debora Spar of the Harvard Business School argues that new medical technology can’t go unregulated forever.
In an environment where doctors are paid by the test, Nortin M. Hadler is convinced that many tests are useless, or worse, harmful.
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