The Mind Readers
The scientists working to free those trapped between life and death.
The scientists working to free those trapped between life and death.
Roger Highfield Mosaic Apr 2014 35min Permalink
A diagnosis in question.
James Ross Gardner Seattle Met Apr 2014 20min Permalink
Watching a brain surgeon at work.
Erica Wagner New Statesman Mar 2014 1h Permalink
On the experience of having a stroke.
Geoff Dyer London Review of Books Mar 2014 15min Permalink
The author gets a crash course in health care pricing after having his urethra fixed.
John Fischer The Morning News Feb 2014 20min Permalink
The neurologist explores the mystery of hallucinations.
Ron Rosenbaum Smithsonian Dec 2012 Permalink
How a once-lauded psychiatrist became a prolific prescriber of painkillers in one of Virginia’s poorest and most isolated counties.
Ariel Sabar Washingtonian Jan 2014 20min Permalink
How a substandard abortion provider stays in business.
Eyal Press New Yorker Feb 2014 40min Permalink
The rise of an expensive, experimental stem-cell treatment in China and the medical tourism it attracts.
Andrés Grippo Matter Jan 2014 15min Permalink
A physician reports on his own catastrophic injury.
Arnold Relman New York Review of Books Jan 2014 15min Permalink
One man’s quest to have a healthy leg amputated.
Anil Ananthaswamy Matter Nov 2012 30min Permalink
It comes from the soil of the desert Southwest. Inhaled, it can cause incurable, even fatal illness. And, thanks to global warming, valley fever is spreading fast.
Dana Goodyear New Yorker Jan 2014 25min Permalink
How a self-taught doctor from Delhi cornered the black market in kidneys, building one of the world’s most lucrative organ-trading rings, until it all came crashing down.
Yudhijit Bhattacharjee Discover Apr 2010 Permalink
For centuries, a little town in Belgium has been treating the mentally ill. Why are its medieval methods so successful?
“I’ve tried therapy, drugs, and booze. Here’s what helps.”
Scott Stossel The Atlantic Dec 2013 50min Permalink
On the lobotomizing of 2,000 U.S. veterans after World War II.
On the history, science, and rise of ACL tears.
Neal Gabler Grantland Dec 2013 25min Permalink
On the criminalization of nondisclosure.
Sergio Hernandez ProPublica Dec 2013 30min Permalink
On recreational genetics, privacy and the new vulnerability of family secrets.
Virginia Hughes Matter Dec 2013 40min Permalink
On Ambien and the search for the next blockbuster insomnia drug.
Ian Parker New Yorker Dec 2013 45min Permalink
The fight to vaccinate children in the border regions between Pakistan and Afghanistan as part of an attempt to eradicate polio worldwide.
Matthieu Aikins Wired Nov 2013 Permalink
After 85 years, antibiotics are growing impotent. So what will medicine, agriculture and everyday life look like if we lose these drugs entirely?
Maryn McKenna Medium Nov 2013 10min Permalink
A recent history of ‘bupe’ Suboxone film, which is described as a miracle cure for opiate addiction but flows freely from for-profit clinics to dealers and inmates, sometimes melted into the pages of smuggled Bibles.
Deborah Sontag New York Times Nov 2013 30min Permalink
An essay on those who don’t get caught by health care’s so-called safety net.
Rachel Pearson Texas Observer Nov 2013 10min Permalink
How the corpses of Hitler’s victims still haunt modern science—and American abortion politics.
Emily Bazelon Slate Nov 2013 30min Permalink