The benefits of giving back, compounded
Sometimes going to prison can be an unfortunately rational health care decision.
Moving against "often undetected forms of abusive practices that occur under the auspices of health care policies."
Robot-assisted hysterectomy became 20 times more common between 2007 and 2010.
Over the last decade in Rwanda, deaths from HIV, TB, and malaria dropped by 80 percent.
Tiny particles introduced into the atmosphere by human activity have hindered recovery by as much as 20 percent.
The only people helped by the proven-to-be-ineffective drug are its manufacturers.
A model for transparency, standardized care, and cost cutting
Even willfully "random" crowd behavior is predictable.
The newly appointed director of the Global Fund to Fight HIV, Tuberculosis, and Malaria believes international health efforts are at the cusp of containing these epidemics.
Victims of a culture that puts their needs last, more women die from childbirth in India than anywhere else in the world.
"There will be others." There weren't.
Reintroducing patients with PTSD to whatever triggers their symptoms -- gradually, in a clinical setting -- can be effective. Veterans Chris Kyle and Eddie Ray Routh were not at a shooting range as part of exposure therapy.
How a bikeshare system made active commuting the most convenient way to get around Washington, D.C.
Hospitalization alone costs $3,000 to $4,000 per day.
Governor John Hickenlooper discusses a cultural shift toward green, active living.
Part of the Afordable Care Act was designed to allow anyone to look up which doctors are getting how much from which companies
Data from more than 10,000 brain injury patients -- including hundreds of variables and outcomes -- is constantly being tracked.
In one U.K. community, 3.7 billion parasites are released daily via dog poop.
Achieving measurable and reproducible improvements begins at home.