Tennessee pharmacies are selling potent versions of the antiparasitic drug ivermectin, led by an anti-vaccine doctor who’s taken "bucketloads."
Tennessee pharmacies are selling potent versions of the antiparasitic drug ivermectin, led by an anti-vaccine doctor who’s taken "bucketloads."
Shrinking fertility should mean less strain on doctors. But nearly half of U.S. counties lack a practicing obstetrician or gynecologist.
"There are some physicians that work to 100”: Dawn Zuidgeest-Craft on becoming a medical doctor in her 70s.
“I know what I’m getting into”: Dawn Zuidgeest-Craft on starting medical residency at almost 73.
Wearables generate a lot of health data, but it exists outside the clinic for the most part. New moves from Oura and Whoop may change that.
Outbreak response is difficult enough without asking responders to wonder whether they will have access to the best available care if they become ill.
“I believe deeply in universal health care. But universal care must also mean universal safety and accountability, not merely universal access.”
Highmark Health is the fourth insurer to sue HaloMD, seeking to overturn arbitration wins.
It’s time to rethink and redesign how patients enter the health care system altogether, writes emergency physician Iyesatta Massaquoi Emeli.
We've been asking Medicare for weeks about the cost of giving seniors $50 obesity drugs.
Why are residency programs disciplining and dismissing trainees in a system funded to train them?
Congress must incentivize more physicians (and their employers) to join the military medical corps, writes the former attending physician to Congress.
The arbitration process has protected patients but generated financial windfalls for some clinicians.
Pulmonologists play a critical role in helping patients breathe easier, and VA has a growing need for respiratory care.
The Trump administration disclosed plans to reduce state directed payments even more, setting up a probable showdown with provider groups.
This skeptic of AI in medicine sees one place where it could be valuable.
Kennedy will have broad latitude to remake the panel, which advises the government on types of preventive care that should be covered by health insurance.
A new analysis shows how some clinicians are cashing in on a new process designed to protect patients from surprise bills.
Hospitals and health systems need to loosen the reins and let physicians combat social media misinformation, writes Adam Goodcoff.
Doctors and insurers are battling to reshape the controversial No Surprises Act arbitration process, which has long frustrated both sides.
A state-by-state approach to clinical AI won’t work. Here’s a framework that can.
“We want, we need to keep medicine local. I think that's good for patients, it's good for communities,” Dr. Glaucomflecken says on the “First Opinion Podcast.”
Faced with stiff local opposition and a possible loss in court, PeaceHealth drops plan to replace Eugene Emergency Physicians with staffing chain ApolloMD.
Color Health, which coordinates cancer screening, is moving into a gap it observed — obtaining and coordinating actual cancer care.
52 health professionals returned home to 43 countries. Here are the unexpected challenges and opportunities they faced.
“No one's pulling the pieces together”: a conversation with medical students about preventive care education.
A new social media narrative claims international grads are stealing American doctors’ jobs. These authors did the math to figure out if it’s true.
Modern medicine is about making people better — not necessarily making them feel good.
Starting residency at 72 isn’t for the faint of heart. But that’s what Dawn Zuidegeest-Craft is doing.
We'll be zeroed in on Kennedy's exchanges with one doc in particular: Bill Cassidy.