In 1930s France, pills and serums were marketed more conceptually.
"Crazy Radio" in Buenos Aires breaks down boundaries between the "interned" and the "externed."
Despite how it's marketed, most seafood doesn't taste like chicken. What's needed is some imagination.
Bicycles, razors, and zippers -- ranked in the name of public health
Styles of practicing medicine vary from hospital to hospital, and they get transmitted to young residents through a "hidden curriculum."
"Fat blocking" Pepsi Special will be released tomorrow in Japan.
First, do no harm.
The impermanence of female fertility is best confronted at younger ages.
Not only is it overused, it refers to a horrendous massacre. And it's not even technically accurate.
Administration looks at everything as a possible weapon of self or mass destruction. But we need windows and nature.
More reason to fixate on aging and our every physical imperfection
Temptation to claim a "status quo" outcome ignores broader trends in health and Medicare debates.
For the vast majority, the effects of the election will be much less drastic than it expected.
How the most contested health questions on state ballots played out
A British health campaign aims to get men's attention about obesity by appealing to penis-centric psyches.
Expect employers to keep some of health law's popular provisions, even if Obama loses.
Not just while high
With a few months under their belts, new doctors need confidence -- but not too much.
Getting 200 sick people out of a dark, silent, 18-story hospital
We should be allowed to be more aware of what we're taking in.