In Utero Genetic Editing: Doc-to-Doc with David Stitelman, MD
/Modern genetic editing technology is making the dreams of science fiction writers a reality by opening the door to editing fetal genomes while they are still the womb.
Read MoreModern genetic editing technology is making the dreams of science fiction writers a reality by opening the door to editing fetal genomes while they are still the womb.
Read MoreThe p37-inhibitor is likely to be approved for the treatment of smallpox, a disease eradicated in 1980.
Read MoreThe study of nearly 500,000 individuals found that more coffee drinking was linked to longer life. But it looks like it's not the caffeine that mediates the benefit.
Read MoreThe studies are early-stage, but the results are compelling: Ketamine may be a highly-effective therapy for depression.
Read MoreResearchers from Dartmouth are pitching a standard definition for "overdiagnosis" in cancer screening. Will it hold up?
Read MoreA Swedish study of more than 1 million individuals suggests that stress disorders like PTSD increase the risk of autoimmune disease later in life.
Read MoreThe study compared doctors who maintained certification against those who didn't and found the former were better at ordering key screening tests.
Read MoreThe much-publicized study suggests that the death toll due to Hurricane Maria was 4,645 people. Here's how it was done.
Read MoreMedical dramas are as popular as ever, but most writers don't have medical degrees. When they need an expert, they call on someone like Dr. Oren Gottfried, a renowned spinal surgeon to set the scene.
Read MoreArtificial intelligence may be a new weapon in the fight against melanoma.
Read MoreUp-to-the-minute medical news, analyzed rigorously, synthesized succinctly.