Imagine a world where your pill could actually tell your doctor: “Yes, I’ve been taken.” That’s no longer science fiction.
These four pieces sketch a portrait of modern knowledge: abundant, persuasive, and riddled with blind spots. Kale’s ...
After nearly three decades of scientific review, regulatory reversals, and political hesitation, perchlorate is back on the ...
GLP-1s are basically appetite’s off-switch: suddenly you’re “full” after three bites. Congrats on the smaller meals and ...
In 18th-century France, science was a men’s club, and women were expected to be ornaments. One aristocrat, the Marquise ...
Alright folks, hot off the presses: the new US Dietary Guidelines for 2025–2030 just dropped, and I’ve got my very first ...
Omega-3 supplements based on fish oils may have cardiovascular benefits for some people. But how do you know if you are one ...
Had a chance to navigate the cough and cold aisle of your pharmacy? Good luck getting what you're looking for. And even if ...
Dietary guidelines are never just scientific documents; they are also political and rhetorical ones. The new “Final Dietary ...
Artificial sweeteners have long been cast as either miracle weight-loss allies or metabolic saboteurs — but the science is ...
Health chatbots are not popular because patients believe artificial intelligence is smarter than their doctors. They are ...
Does motion sickness turn you into a green, spewing mess? For plenty of people, the answer is yes. Current remedies may or ...