Renowned novelist, philosopher and professor Rebecca Newberger Goldstein will explore the ancient battlefield where philosophy and literature have long contended to solve the meaning of life in this term’s Tanner Lectures on Human Values at the Whitney...
At a time when the medical profession is suffering from severe shortages of primary care physicians and nurses, and with millions more Americans entering the system because of healthcare reform, the demand for physician associates is growing dramatically....
“I feel like this is the most important thing I’ve ever done in my life,” says Nicki Pereira, senior project manager at the Yale Health Center, as she recalls the moment she suggested donating eight truckloads of medical equipment to a hospital in Haiti....
“Journey of the Universe,” a documentary exploring the wonders of the cosmos through the double lens of religion and science, will premiere at Yale on March 25 and 26.The one-hour documentary, which will be shown on PBS stations in the fall, will have...
“Journey of the Universe,” a documentary exploring the wonders of the cosmos, through the double lens of religion and science will premiere at Yale on March 25 and 26.The one-hour documentary, which will be shown on PBS stations in the fall, will have...
Concerns over tired doctors leading to mistakes and patient injuries has led to progressively shorter hours for medical residents in the United States and Europe over the past 20 years. But a review in the British Medical Journal shows that reducing hours...
Rachel Maddow, political analyst and host of the critically acclaimed “Rachel Maddow Show” on MSNBC, will be at the Law School on Monday, March 28, for a Q&A with Amy Kapczynski ‘03 J.D., visiting associate professor at Yale.“A Conversation with...
Jo Handelsman, the newly appointed Frederick Phineas Rose Professor of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology, is noted for her research on the diversity in microbial communities and their role in infectious disease, as well as for her efforts to...
Competition in college basketball bears a remarkable similarity to life and death in the wild, according to a Yale study published March 9 in the journal PLoS ONE.The Yale researchers found that a few college basketball teams win many games and most win a...