
Doctors Discover a Woman With Her Own Unique Blood Type
Newly discovered “Gwada-negative” is the rarest of 48 known blood groups
Doctors Discover a Woman With Her Own Unique Blood Type
Newly discovered “Gwada-negative” is the rarest of 48 known blood groups
Bariatric Surgery Does Not Resolve Weight Stigma for Everyone
While bariatric surgery can result in significant weight loss, weight stigma can persist years after the surgery.
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U.S. Budget Cuts Are Robbing Early-Career Scientists of Their Future
Canceled grants and slashed budgets are disproportionately affecting junior health researchers, dealing a major blow to the future of science and society in the U.S.
Serenading Cells with Audible Sound Alters Gene Activity
Audible sound can affect gene activity in mouse cells, boosting the attachment of muscle precursors to surrounding tissue and decreasing fat accumulation
Testosterone Therapy Is Booming. But Is It Actually Safe?
As more men turn to testosterone replacement therapy (TRT) for energy, mood and muscle, experts warn the risks are still not fully understood.
The Truth about Testosterone
To boost mood and manliness, men are spending lots of money on the hormone testosterone—yet they may see trouble instead of benefits
What’s behind the Mysterious Epidemic of Kidney Disease Killing Thousands of Young Men?
As cases of chronic kidney disease emerge in outdoor laborers around the world, scientists are finding that repeated damage from prolonged extreme heat seems to be a leading factor to kidney failure
Are We Ready for Death in Space?
NASA has quietly taken steps to prepare for a death in space. We need to ask how nations will deal with this inevitability now, as more people start traveling off the planet
Could Mitochondria Be Rewriting the Rules of Biology?
New discoveries about mitochondria could reshape how we understand the body’s response to stress, aging and illness
In World First, Baby Receives Personalized CRISPR Gene-Editing Treatment
A CRISPR treatment seems to have been effective for a baby’s devastating disease, but it is not clear whether such bespoke therapies can be widely applied
The Push to Grant Fetuses and Embryos Legal Rights Is Threatening IVF Treatment
In the new book Personhood, historian and law professor Mary Ziegler explores how the push to grant embryos and fetuses full legal rights is reshaping U.S. reproductive health care, research and policy
Do ‘Alternative’ Measles Treatments Work?
As the measles outbreak in the U.S. gets bigger, HHS’s secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., touts nonvaccine treatments. But they generally don’t help and can carry dangers