Keeping pregnant participants out of medical research is more dangerous than including them
The inclusion of pregnant participants in RCTs has remained flat over the past 15 years. Changing this norm will require institutional-level reforms.
The inclusion of pregnant participants in RCTs has remained flat over the past 15 years. Changing this norm will require institutional-level reforms.
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A small study finds that an off-the-shelf vaccine candidate by Elicio Therapeutics boosted immune response in pancreatic cancer patients.
“This isn’t scientific disagreement. It’s either staggering incompetence or willful misrepresentation,” writes infectious disease physician Jake Scott.
This is the web edition of D.C. Diagnosis, STAT’s twice-weekly newsletter about the politics and policy of health and medicine.
This week on “The Readout LOUD” podcast: Vinay Prasad’s return, animal testing alternatives, and mRNA upended.
Keeping blood pressure below 120/80 lowers risk of dementia, as well as heart and kidney disease, new guidelines say.
As health secretary, Kennedy could revive a defunct task force to scrutinize the safety of shots given to babies and kids.
Keeping blood pressure below 120/80 lowers risk of dementia, as well as heart and kidney disease, new guidelines say.
In a new episode of the video series STATus Report, a closer look at the reasons health secretary RFK Jr. cited for canceling contracts on…