Public Health & Epidemiology
The study was small and didn’t include a placebo group, but there is reason to believe that the drugs really do work.
Be skeptical of a new study questioning the sweetener’s safety.
Marburg virus, like its cousin Ebola, causes severe disease, with fatality rates ranging from 22% to 90%.
A deadly myth has been manufactured from poor methods and wishful thinking.
The Apple Watch could soon take the pain out of monitoring blood sugar levels.
Gum disease begins in the mouth but spreads to the joints. Rheumatoid arthritis is just one of several diseases linked to poor oral health.
Researchers found that the average penis increased in size from 4.8 inches in 1992 to 6 inches in 2021. But in some regions, they shrank.
The initial study lays the groundwork for another larger, longer phase 2 trial.
“Rational vaccinology” could lead to effective cancer vaccines.
From the bedside to the lab bench, here’s how laboratory testing works.
The pathogen typically kills more than 90% of people it infects.
Viruses, it turns out, can block one another and take turns to dominate.
Millennials are reversing a 40-year decline in stroke deaths.
From COVID and cancer vaccines to a steady drop in the number of people living in extreme poverty, there are reasons for optimism in 2023.
Researchers have been developing a promising model that can more closely mimic the human body – organ-on-a-chip.
The vaccine provided protection for mouse and ferret models.
A food fight may finally be put to rest.
People with shingles have an approximately 80% higher risk of stroke than those without the disease.
The new documentary “Make People Better” leans toward a different narrative about gene-editing than we’ve heard before.
The placebo effect is real. So are the ethical conundrums posed by those who would exploit the latest research advances for profit.
The prescription poop can correct life-threatening bacterial imbalances in the gut.
Running to catch the bus might help you live longer.
A recent study reveals how nerve insulation becomes impaired in the brains of Alzheimer’s patients.
An independent researcher looks into why there’s such strong opposition to her research.
The larger truth on the streets is that no one uses just one drug anymore.
Three years after the pandemic began, we still don’t know the origin of COVID. A strange lack of curiosity has stifled the debate.
Years of shoddy research have overstated the risk.
The “love hormone” might be an unexplored treatment for Alzheimer’s disease and other forms of dementia.