Pregnancy in humans has typically been studied as an anti-inflammatory process, where a mother’s immune system is suppressed to protect the fetus from attack.
Why inflammation — a major cause of morning sickness — is necessary for initiating pregnancy,...
This article originally appeared on July 13 in The Avenger, a publication of the USS George H.W. Bush (named after the former president, a 1948 graduate of Yale). It was written by MCSN Jennifer M. Kirkman.
One by one, sailors of all ranks begin filing in...
A new study by Yale researchers of more than 8.9 million visits to emergency departments (EDs) reveals that a small group of predominantly for-profit hospitals in the United States have the highest concentration of out-of-network ED billing rates: While...
The largely barren islands reaching north from Antarctica are actually the birthplace of many modern species of marine life — and perhaps will be the first places to be impacted by invading species in the wake of climate change, according to a study by...
Researchers at Yale and the University of California-San Francisco have found that few medical devices are analyzed to consider the influence of their users’ sex, age, or race on safety and effectiveness.
The findings are published in JAMA Internal...
Two Yale faculty members, Kirk Freudenburg and Valerie Hansen, were appointed to endowed professorships.
Kirk Freudenburg, newly appointed as the Brooks and Suzanne Ragen Professor of Classics, focuses his research on the social life of Roman letters, in...