5 most widely read First Opinions of 2019 – STAT
In 2019, 600-plus First Opinion authors addressed everthing from the opioid crisis to getting bad news from 23andMe. Here are the most widely read ones.
In 2019, 600-plus First Opinion authors addressed everthing from the opioid crisis to getting bad news from 23andMe. Here are the most widely read ones.
The cuts to U.S. foreign aid could result in the resurgence of some diseases. They’ve also forced health workers out of their jobs.
Prime Medicine and Beam Therapeutics had common origins in gene editing. Now they’re both pursuing treatments for the same disease.
And other health news stories you need to read this morning.
FDA will review nutrients, increase testing for heavy metals and contaminants, explore development of updated formulas.
The director of public health for the city of Lubbock said Tuesday that uptake of the measles vaccine “has definitely been a struggle,” and that…
‘A stopgap to the hospital closure crisis’ has been used by only 38 facilities because of the strings attached.
The Trump administration has canceled funding for an ongoing 30-year, nationwide study tracking patients with prediabetes and diabetes, researchers said.
In this edition of STAT’s Health Tech newsletter: Dr. Oz touting the benefits of AI for U.S. health care, and more.
Taxing employer-provided health care benefits for an extension of tax cuts could drastically increase the number of uninsured Americans.
A little-known HHS agency may face big layoffs, FDA employees return to the office, and more in today’s D.C. Diagnosis newsletter.