More than 50 of the most dangerous, disgusting, humiliating and just plain bad professions
This is the first time doctors have used DNA sequencing for emergency diagnosis and treatment.
Researchers have revealed the Heartland Virus is Widespread in America
Interviews with doctors suggest the Lone Star tick, and the allergy to sugars in red meat that it can cause, is on the rise.
It's birdbrained
Come again?
Even more evidence that we're continuing to change.
HPV vaccines have always been advertised as protecting women, but a new study shows they also work against an infection that causes a throat cancer that's much more common in men.
PopSci tackles life's whys, hows and who-dunnits in this Q&A-style; feature
What is...Toronto (General Hospital)?
With the release of the DSM-5 this month, psychotherapist Gary Greenberg questions whether psychiatry's diagnostic Bible can truly get at the nature of mental suffering.
A new test for HPV has been cleared as way to screen for cervical cancer, but doctors are concerned that it doesn't do enough to protect younger women.
Babies' genomes hold clues that can save their lives, but that same information could be used in far less noble ways. Where should we draw the line?
Antibiotic resistance is making your UTI harder to treat.
Pennsylvania’s tech-savvy attack on the West Nile virus.
A scientist with a swab and a microscope could tell what school you went to
GPU-driven processing is bringing the predictive power of supercomputers to the radiology suite
Worst Science Jobs II: Number 9
Bill Andrews has spent two decades unlocking the molecular mechanisms of aging. His mission: to extend the human life span to 150 years--or die trying
Bust out the bug repellant