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73 votes
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How one doctor in the USA keeps practicing, despite a long string of sanctions, fines, and lawsuits
30 votes -
Researchers engineer bacteria that can detect tumor DNA (in mice)
6 votes -
Man bitten by stray cat contracts infection unknown to science
63 votes -
The impact of vaccines and behavior on US cumulative deaths from COVID-19
9 votes -
Some patients who took weight-loss drugs face disturbing side effects
33 votes -
What is your experience with switching medication and brain zaps?
I've just started switching my medication and it's been pretty bad for me. Brain zaps are very frequent and I'm crying a lot. I'm struggling. I've been trying to find out what other people's...
I've just started switching my medication and it's been pretty bad for me. Brain zaps are very frequent and I'm crying a lot. I'm struggling.
I've been trying to find out what other people's experience has been like when they switch meds. What is normal and what isn't. People who relate to brain zaps and how they deal with it. Are brain zaps even considered a real thing?
What has your experience been like?
26 votes -
A new mode of cancer treatment
8 votes -
AI has helped radiologists detect 20% more cases of breast cancer during screenings, new Swedish study finds
25 votes -
Artificial intelligence versus human-controlled doctor in virtual reality simulation for sepsis team training: Randomized controlled study
10 votes -
Thermo Fisher Scientific settles with family of Henrietta Lacks, whose HeLa cells uphold medicine
26 votes -
Illegal medical lab containing bioengineered mice and infectious agents including HIV and herpes discovered in Fresno, California
32 votes -
The body’s immune system responding to a COVID vaccine, and not the vaccine itself, is likely the cause of menstrual cycle changes experienced after vaccination
42 votes -
The psychedelic drug that conquered Europe
11 votes -
A political gap in excess deaths in the USA widened after COVID-19 vaccines arrived, study says
36 votes -
How a drug maker profited by slow-walking a promising HIV therapy
21 votes -
Measuring private equity penetration and consolidation of ownership in emergency medicine and anesthesiology in the USA
10 votes -
New study finds Covid can infect the liver
13 votes -
New tinnitus therapy can quiet torturous ringing in the ears
86 votes -
2022 guidance from President Biden's administration assures doctors they’ll be protected by US federal law for providing emergency abortion care even if their state bans the procedure
40 votes -
Johnson & Johnson has granted Stop TB Partnership license to produce generic bedaquiline in low and middle-income countries
33 votes -
An open letter to Johnson & Johnson regarding its strategy to extend its patent on bedaquiline leading to a predicted six million lives lost over four years
79 votes -
I'm finally biting the bullet and investing in laser eye surgery, anything I should know?
I've done a large amount of research and got a consultation a few months ago, my doctor said I could get PRK as SMILE and LASIK weren't good options for my cornea. As I understand it the results...
I've done a large amount of research and got a consultation a few months ago, my doctor said I could get PRK as SMILE and LASIK weren't good options for my cornea. As I understand it the results should be very similar, just a longer/more painful recovery time. I've got family who is going to come into town for a week to help me with anything, but I wanted to know if any of you have gone through PRK and had advice or an experience to share.
43 votes -
Most patients using weight-loss drugs like Wegovy stop within a year, data show
10 votes -
Australia legalises psychedelics for mental health
29 votes -
Could this drug help cure PTSD? With Rachel Nuwer - Factually
8 votes -
Golden age of medicine
18 votes -
ChubbyEmu case study of a victim of unlicensed food truck
14 votes -
Goodbye, Ozempic
33 votes -
Trace amounts of antidepressants cause behavioral changes in crayfish, potentially making them more vulnerable to predators
14 votes -
An inhaled Covid vaccine booster was more than five-fold effective for inducing neutralizing antibodies at 28-days, and more durable at one-year, than shots, vs Omicron BA.5 in a randomized trial
18 votes -
How do you keep track of your medication refills?
Every person in my household takes a daily regimen of prescription medication and/or supplements. We keep ending up in situations where we run out of something because we don’t have a good way to...
Every person in my household takes a daily regimen of prescription medication and/or supplements. We keep ending up in situations where we run out of something because we don’t have a good way to keep track of our remaining supply of each thing. We need a better system for managing this!
We each use a 28-day (4 week) pill dispenser box which helps somewhat. I refill the dispensers when they are empty. The problem is, some of the medications run out in the last week of the dispenser. At the time I fill it, it’s way too early to call the pharmacy for a refill. But by the time the supply runs out I’ve forgotten about it and have to scramble to get more. I hope I’m explaining that clearly. It’s complicated because every medication runs out on a different schedule.
If you’ve got a solution to this problem please share it!
15 votes -
This week in virology 1018: Clinical update
7 votes -
Pacemakers, other implants, made of jelly
3 votes -
Swedish appeals court ups surgeon's sentence for 'harm' during experimental windpipe transplants
7 votes -
Cambridge-Caltech team of scientists claim to have created synthetic human embryos from stem cells at conference; work not yet published
29 votes -
Touchlab has launched a first-of-its-kind robot which gives clinicians the ability to 'feel' patients remotely as part of a Finnish hospital pilot
8 votes -
Auckland surgeons must now consider ethnicity in prioritising patients for operations
7 votes -
The moral crisis of America’s doctors
15 votes -
Several charged with trafficking body parts stolen from Harvard Medical School morgue
14 votes -
World Health Organization advises against use of artificial sweeteners
49 votes -
Alzheimer’s drug gets FDA panel’s backing, setting the stage for broader US use
13 votes -
Sweden set up a eugenics plan, grounded in the science of racial biology, between 1934 and 1976 – between 20,000 and 33,000 Swedes were forced to be sterilised
12 votes -
ACT passes Australian-first legislation banning irreversible medical procedures for young intersex children
12 votes -
Lung cancer pill cuts risk of death by half, says ‘thrilling’ study
11 votes -
Catch up quick: COVID-19
7 votes -
How Sweden and Denmark became rare bright spots for Europe's pharma industry
3 votes -
MIT’s vaccine printer: The game-changer in vaccine distribution
3 votes -
How NASA reinvented the wheel
2 votes -
The insane engineering of MRI machines
3 votes