Medicine Information
How PBMs are Hurting Your Local Pharmacy
Across the country, local pharmacies are boarding up.
Another Scary Reminder of the Superbug Crisis
More than 80 Americans across 18 states have been struck with a serious bacterial infection thanks to contaminated eye drops. Several have suffered permanent vision loss. Four have died.
Superbugs Need Their Own Moonshot Initiative
As two physicians who have devoted our lives to studying cancer, we're thrilled with President Biden's "Cancer Moonshot" initiative to halve the disease's death rate within 25 years. But it won't achieve that goal unless we act on a lesser-known health crisis.
Are "Patent Thickets" to Blame for High Drug Prices?
Americans overwhelmingly believe that prescription drugs cost too much. But they're divided about the source of the problem -- and the potential solutions.
Doctors Trained Abroad will Save Rural Health Care
Health care is growing hard to come by in rural America.
A Cornerstone of Modern Medicine on the Brink of Collapse
Roughly a century after the first antibiotics revolutionized medicine, the development pipeline for these critical drugs is on the brink of collapse.
Save Communities of Color by Getting Vaccinated
Black and Brown Americans are dying of Covid-19 at roughly three times the rate of their white peers.
Don't Neglect Long-Haul Covid in the Panic Over Delta
"Long Covid" is one of many scary phrases that have barged into our vocabulary since the pandemic upended global life.
Harvard Green Light Could Be Next Breakthrough Tool to Fight Migraine
For the millions of people who suffer from migraine or other types of serious headaches, a new drug-free, non-invasive tool is in store that can help alleviate pain.
Doctors' Critical Role in Making the Diabetes Heart Connection
One in 10 Americans lives with type 2 diabetes. Among many communities, diabetes is downplayed as "having a little sugar" and, with long family histories with the disease, dismissed as an inevitability.
Can "Adaptogens" Help Relieve the Stresses of the COVID Pandemic?
The world has been in a state of extreme stress for nearly two years now since the breakout of the COVID pandemic. Sadly, there appears to be no end in sight. We may not be able to do anything about the cause but, perhaps, there is a way to deal with the effects by adapting to the stressors, not in a psychological way; rather by ingesting aptly named herbal medicines called adaptogens. Of course, before you begin self-medicating, whether the drug is a natural medication or a chemical-based medicine, it's important that you consult your healthcare provider.
COVID-19 Showed We Need a More Diverse Doctor Workforce
Deaths related to COVID-19 were more than twice as high among Black, Latino, and Native American people as among whites in 2020, according to new research out from the National Cancer Institute.
Mark Cuban Shows How the Free Market Helps Patients
Billionaire investor Mark Cuban is known for his razzle-dazzle. Not only has he backed a long string of tech, media, and cryptocurrency companies, he also owns the Dallas Mavericks basketball team and is a TV star on "Shark Tank."
PrEP for the End of the HIV/AIDS Epidemic
The end of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the United States could soon be in sight.
Activists Should Stop Monkeying Around with Lifesaving Research
Alzheimer's research is a matter of life and death. But it also involves a lot of monkey business -- literally.
Yes, I Am My Brother's Keeper—And So Much More
For the first time in our lives, we have experienced a universal international event, known as Covid-19. The World Series doesn't come close to being a global event. The World Cup and the Olympics are much more global, but even these events bypass certain parts of the globe (and many around us have no interest in these sporting events). All of us, however, have been impacted by Covid-19. We have all, at times, been wearing masks, monitoring our social distancing, and discussing the pros and cons of various treatments and vaccines.
International Medical Graduates Ease the U. S. Doctor Shortage
Thousands of young doctors recently learned where they'll be spending the next few years of their lives in residency.
Prostate Drug Price Controls Come at Too High a Cost
Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra is facing mounting pressure to unilaterally lower the price of high-cost medications. A group of nonprofits just petitioned him to cut the cost of six medications, including Xtandi, a popular prostate cancer medicine manufactured by Astellas, a Japanese drug company.
Superbugs Are Getting Stronger. Our Defenses Are Getting Weaker
Drug-resistant infections pose a growing threat to public health. We're not prepared to meet it.