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First pathologist in new Arkansas Crime Lab fellowship program to start work next fall | Arkansas...
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette· 4 days agoDr. Lance Van Truong matched with the program on Wednesday and will serve as a fellow in the lab...
The invisible lives — and deaths — of the children of sex workers
NPR· 16 hours ago"They could be born in a brothel and their birth is not registered. So for many of these children,...
What's the latest on Harvard's morgue scandal? Here's where things stand now
WBUR Boston· 7 days agoEditor's Note: This is an excerpt from WBUR's daily morning newsletter, WBUR Today. It’s been almost...
Why Maternity Care Is Underpaid
Time via Yahoo News· 14 hours ago“When you compare anatomically similar RVUs between a variety of different surgeries, you'll see that gynecologic surgery typically falls short in terms...
Postmortem, Ep. 1: The crime
WBUR Boston· 7 days agoHundreds of people have donated their bodies to Harvard Medical School, hoping to advance science and train the next generation of doctors ...
New analysis links resident physicians' exam scores to patient survival
Medical Xpress· 14 hours agoThe analysis was led by researchers at Harvard Medical School and the American Board of Internal...
Ecstasy’s Odyssey | Mike Jay
New York Review of Books· 6 days ago...Research Unit, which in 2019 was succeeded by the Center for Psychedelic and Consciousness Research and has been followed by dedicated centers and ...
RECRUITING DISTINGUISHED FORENSIC PATHOLOGY FELLOW TO THE ARKANSAS STATE CRIME LABORATORY IS A GAME...
Arkansas Govenment News Room· 3 days agoA graduate of Touro University Nevada with a Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine (D.O.), Dr. Truong is...
JudyAnn Bigby
GBH News· 5 days agoSecretary of Health and Human Services, Dr. JudyAnn Bigby, oversees 17 state agencies and serves in the Cabinet of Governor Deval Patrick. One of...
AI may help diagnose rare diseases years earlier
United Press International via Yahoo News· 5 days agoArtificial intelligence might be able to identify patients who have rare diseases years earlier than they would typically be diagnosed, a new study says.