Send us a link
Can Better Biotech Finally Replace Lab Animals?
Replacing research animals with tools that better mimic human biology could improve medicine.
Empowering Patient Research
For far too long, medicine has ignored the valuable insights that patients have into their own diseases.
When Our Medical Students Learn Anatomy, They See a Person, Not a Specimen
How Rich Countries and Big Pharma Companies Hinder the Human Right to Science
Health: Reading Our Future in the Bones of Children Past
As the United Kingdom braces for a sharp fall in living standards, a bioarchaeologist and a paediatrician discuss what the past can reveal about the social forces that shape modern health crises.
Lingering Colonial Legacies: The Study of Skin is Too White
The historical lack of racial representation in dermatology textbooks isn't just a problem in countries with majority white populations, but across the globe.
Towards Standardizing Plain Language Summaries: The Open Pharma Recommendations
Towards Standardizing Plain Language Summaries: The Open Pharma Recommendations
A look into the value of providing plain language summaries in research papers, and the standards created for doing so.
No time to die: An in-depth analysis of James Bond's exposure to infectious agents
No time to die: An in-depth analysis of James Bond's exposure to infectious agents
Global travelers, whether tourists or secret agents, are exposed to infectious agents. We hypothesized that agents pre-occupied with espionage and counterterrorism may, at their peril, fail to correctly prioritize travel medicine.
The Bias That Blinds: Why Some People Get Dangerously Different Medical Care
New Research Shows Promise for Osteoarthritis Cure
Osteoarthritis is a crippling, incurable disease. But scientists behind a new large-scale study say their findings could help pave the way to a cure.
Time to Assume That Health Research is Fraudulent Until Proven Otherwise? - The BMJ
Time to Assume That Health Research is Fraudulent Until Proven Otherwise? - The BMJ
Health research is based on trust. Health professionals and journal editors reading the results of a clinical trial assume that the trial happened and that the results were honestly reported. But about 20% of the time, said Ben Mol, they would be wrong.
Stinging Secret: Research Reveals How Venom from Australian Caterpillars Could Be Used in Medicines
Stinging Secret: Research Reveals How Venom from Australian Caterpillars Could Be Used in Medicines
University of Queensland researchers have found a bacteria-killing compound in the toxins of mottled cup moth caterpillars
ELife Announces New Approach to Publishing in Medicine
By bringing rigorous review and editorial oversight to clinical preprints, eLife hopes to make peer-reviewed preprints a currency of trust in medicine.
Quantum Leap for Medical Research As Microscope Zooms in on Tiny Structures
Australian scientists develop a microscope that works with 35% more clarity, raising hope for improvements in medical imaging.
Vaccines That Can Protect Against Many Coronaviruses Could Prevent Another Pandemic
Vaccines That Can Protect Against Many Coronaviruses Could Prevent Another Pandemic
Approaches include tailored nanoparticles, chimeric proteins, virus cocktails.
A Network Analysis of COVID-19 MRNA Vaccine Patents
A preliminary network analysis highlights the complex intellectual property landscape behind mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccines.
They Call It a 'Women's Disease.' She Wants to Redefine It.
As a bioengineer, Linda Griffith once grew a human ear on the back of a mouse. Now she is reframing endometriosis as a key to unlocking some of biology's greatest secrets.
Disrupted Sleep Linked to Heart Disease and Death
Results from a long-term study of 8001 people suggest disrupted sleep is linked to cardiovascular disease and mortality - in women more than men.
The Reporting of Race and Ethnicity in Medical and Science Journals
The Reporting of Race and Ethnicity in Medical and Science Journals
For many years and increasingly in the last year, the JAMA Network journals have published many important articles addressing disparities and racism in medical education, research, and health care and highlighting initiatives to help address deep-rooted inequities.