New Cases of Childhood Diabetes Rose during the Pandemic
It isn’t clear why, but researchers are investigating a possible COVID link
Carolyn Barber has been an emergency department physician for 25 years. She is co-founder of the homeless work program Wheels of Change and author of many articles and the book Runaway Medicine: What You Don't Know May Kill You, which was recently Amazon's number-one Hot New Release in Health Care Administration. She received her M.D. at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
It isn’t clear why, but researchers are investigating a possible COVID link
How to limit your risk of transmitting or getting infected with SARS-CoV-2
Impaired blood flow leads to loss of limbs
What causes them and how to protect yourself
The number of pregnant people suffering from severe COVID is preventable tragedy
Who’s caring for the ICU physicians?
A genomic revolution is poised to cure sickle cell and other genetic diseases
Lengthy suspensions of crucial services for foster children during the past year exacted a heavy emotional and mental toll
Recently approved rapid antigen tests are likely to help mitigate the chain of transmission and put the U.S. on par with other countries that have them
A program called Wheels of Change pays unsheltered people to pick up trash or otherwise help clean up their community—and it can turn their lives around
It’s complicated; not even the experts agree
The pandemic has put the region’s emergency personnel under extraordinary strain
More and more patients are dealing with major symptoms that linger for months
Bedside imaging holds vast potential as a diagnostic tool, especially during the pandemic
They highlight one of the biggest problems in American health care
Professional and college teams alike need to get fans back in the stands in droves—as long as they can keep everyone safe
Proponents say yes, but scientific studies on the effectiveness of this chemical derived from cannabis are a mixed bag
How can we make our schools, office buildings and homes safer?
A growing body of research is raising concerns about the cardiac consequences of the coronavirus
Cheap and quick, they could move us toward normalcy before a vaccine is widely available
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