Since the 1960s, the hallucinogenic drug ibogaine has piqued interest as a potential treatment for opioid addiction, fueled by limited experimental evidence and anecdotal claims by those who claim they no longer felt a craving for opioids after taking...
Applicants and matriculants to U.S. medical schools in recent years have increasingly come from households with higher incomes, a new Yale-led study reveals. The findings, the researchers say, raise questions about who has access to medical education and...
Though 30% of the global burden of disease is treatable through surgery, surgeon-scientists make up less than 2% of U.S. researchers who receive funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), a new Yale-led study finds. This underrepresentation...
Inside the Becton Engineering and Applied Science Center on Prospect Street, in a fifth-floor space known as the university cleanroom, researchers from across Yale build small devices like qubits and microchips, circuits to manipulate or detect light, and...
Dora Guo ’23 has always wanted to be a teacher. Now, as she prepares for graduation, she’s surer than ever that a classroom is where she belongs.
This interest led her to Yale’s Education Studies program and to groups like the Anti-racist Teaching and...
Last summer, while sitting in a rural Guatemalan hospital with a severely twisted ankle after a fellowship spent searching for Mayan pyramids, Diego Miró-Rivera received an incredible email.
Months earlier, he’d reached out to an art collector, asking him...
In high school, Chelsey R. Carter volunteered with an organization that helps people with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), an experience that shaped the researcher she has become. She is now an assistant professor at Yale School of Public Health...