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Helping patients in pain often means prescribing opioid drugs, which can be dangerous. New research looks into alternatives.
Readers weigh in on a national pain strategy and innovative new technologies that could help the blind see.
Physicians have had plenty of powerful painkillers but no national strategy for treatment. Could that finally change?
Prescription abuse has reached epidemic levels. So why is the FDA approving powerful new painkillers?
The use of 3-D models to track a patient’s pain has roots in a sixteenth-century sketch by a German master.
A father and son fight through the ordeal of multiple surgeries to repair the boy’s skull.
If residents’ long shifts endanger patients, lightening the load should reduce the risk. Trouble is, there’s no evidence it does.
Genetic variations, it turns out, explain why everyone experiences pain differently. Now medicine can push toward personalized relief.
In some trials, subjects have responded just as well to sugar pills as they have to real treatment. So how can we trust any real results?
A new path to internal organs would cause little pain and leave no scars. But will the benefits outweigh the risks?
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