
Doctors Thought They Knew What a Genetic Disease Is. They Were Wrong.
Mutations that happen throughout a person’s life may contribute to disease more than we realized.
Our health writers explore wellness culture, human behavior, mortality and disease, and other mysteries of the body and the mind.

Mutations that happen throughout a person’s life may contribute to disease more than we realized.

Coquito has all of the holiday spirit—and none of the salmonella.

Most American tortillas taste like cardboard. Chefs, restaurants, and companies are trying to restore the corny glory.

The dreaded “winter wave” looks different this year.

Bird flu has spread so widely that it was always going to make someone seriously sick.

Welcome to the era of the quantified pet.

But the would-be health secretary has shown more interest in pressing iron than pressing the science forward.

West Virginia gave obesity drugs to teachers and state employees—then took them away.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. fits into a long history of Americans who have waged battle against conventional medicine.

Doctors might be slow to admit it, but Ozempic and other GLP-1 drugs are making dieting and exercise obsolete.