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The author explains the connection between her appearance on Late Night with David Letterman and the problem of unsupervised drug-taking by the elderly.
As more people receive joint implants, one company hopes to make a synthetic bone that works with the body, not against it.
Debora Spar of the Harvard Business School argues that new medical technology can’t go unregulated forever.
Once a last resort for the severely depressed, electroconvulsive therapy has been joined by a new generation of less shocking alternatives.
Why do scrubs look they way they do?
The world’s most recognizable birth control method, the Pill, turns 50.
Energy to run diagnostic tests could come from an unexpected source.
The Veterans Health Administration, of all places, has embraced the computer age. Will the rest of medicine (finally) follow.
These remarkable devices are saving soldiers, improving lives after combat—and benefiting civilians too.
Body parts, made quickly out of long-lasting materials, could be the future of prosthetic organs.
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