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The healing power of the arts and humanities holds hope for today’s young doctors-in-training.
The healing power of the arts and humanities holds hope for today’s young doctors-in-training.
Doctors at Johns Hopkins are using high-tech tools to better tailor treatment to each individual — avoiding surgery for slow-growing tumors and using targeted medicines for those with aggressive cancer.
Meet five longtime faculty members whose contributions as mentors, researchers and more offer a whole new window into what it means to be “retired.”
In cardiology research, the gender gap in funding persists, and women are not choosing cardiology as a specialty.
This issue’s note from the editor, plus letters from our readers.
How a new pass/fail option will change the way medical students prepare for residency.
A new research tower will foster collaboration.
Richard G. Bennett to retire after more than a decade as president of Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center.
When it comes to topical cannabidiol (CBD) products, inaccurate and misleading labeling of CBD content is widespread, according to a new study by Johns Hopkins researchers.
The 2022–23 U.S. News & World Report Best Hospitals rankings are in, and The Johns Hopkins Hospital is ranked #5 in the nation — marking 33 consecutive years of placing in the top 5.
Researchers at Johns Hopkins have helped develop a nanobody capable of getting through the tough exterior of brain cells and untangling misshapen proteins that lead to Parkinson’s disease, Lewy body dementia, and other neurocognitive disorders.
In a small but rigorous pilot study, a team led by gastroenterologist Stephen Meltzer demonstrated that a minimally invasive biomarker-based strategy they developed was 90% successful in detecting the most common form of esophagus cancer.
Uncontrolled diabetes can substantially increase the risk of heart failure progression for older adults with early stage heart failure, according to a new Johns Hopkins-led study.
Surveillance programs for people at high risk of developing pancreatic cancers can help detect precancerous conditions and cancers early, when they are most treatable, according to a new multicenter study directed by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center.
A Scientific Revolution: 10 Men and Women Who Reinvented American Medicine
A murder mystery set in 1918 Baltimore takes on some timeless social issues.
Five hours is the window of time in which a novel, automated liquid biopsy test being developed by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center can accurately detect the presence of cancer DNA in the blood of patients with metastatic breast cancer.
Smalligan champions doctoring in far-flung communities.
Saylor is pushing to expand neurology training and care.
Oliva-Hemker leads 5,000 faculty members as vice dean.
Simeon Margolis was a pioneer of preventive cardiology.
Lois Feinblatt left a legacy in the Sex and Gender Clinic.
David Knox made seminal discoveries as an ‘out-of-the-box’ thinker.
Hoehn-Saric pushed beyond Freudian thinking.