Why medical schools have been popping up all over (and will keep coming)
But what about the residency shortage?
But what about the residency shortage?
Dr. Eric Topol of Scripps Translational Science Institute said medical wearable companies still need to figure out the data analytics and the clinical utility parts.
The Shkreli affair, along with shenanigans from Valeant, have awakened serious journalists, who have started to look into drug pricing more broadly.
Martin Shkreli looked uncharacteristically somber during his perp walk on Thursday morning. Begs the question: Is this the end of Shkreli's ludicrous, smug antics? Nah.
A lot of schadenfreude there.
For people who hate Shkreli for what he's done in 2015, this will be like the government getting Al Capone for tax evasion.
This eBook, in collaboration with Care Logistics, details how hospitals and health systems can facilitate more effective decision-making by operationalizing elevated awareness.
Don’t be like Acme Medical Device Company.
"It's not like we go in our trench coat and a top hat, saying, 'Uh I need the insulin.' The clerks usually don’t know it’s a big secret. They’ll just go, 'Do we sell over-the-counter insulin?' "
Smartphones will be medical devices and healthcare will be a Top 3 presidential campaign issue.
Let's make 2016 the year that patients and doctors take back medicine.
Gabby Everett, the site director for BioLabs Pegasus Park, offered a tour of the space and shared some examples of why early-stage life science companies should choose North Texas.
Here are the “seven habits”, or more aptly just attributes, of Celgene’s highly successful external R&D strategy.
Maybe Code Black is the new normal?
A student “depicted his supervising physician screaming at the medical team, causing one intern to urinate herself moments before having her head bitten off for possessing too little information about a patient.”
Although ICD10 and Meaningful Use work may be diminished in 2016, security work is likely to increase. As I’ve told the Board, security is a process, not a project. You’ll get better and better but will never be done.
MedCity News' Neil Versel was there when Jon Stewart returned to "The Daily Show" to shame Congress for not providing perpetual healthcare to sick and injured 9/11 first responders.