Previous estimates of preventable deaths of hospitalized patients may be two to four times too high, a new Yale School of Medicine study suggests.
The meta-analysis of eight studies of inpatient deaths, published in the Journal of General Internal...
This inaugural science briefing column, titled “Insights & Outcomes,” takes us from the inner workings of water to the rivers of methane found on Saturn’s moon, Titan — with a stop along the way to learn about a video game that teaches kids the...
Rohit De, Marcela Echeverri, and Greta LaFleur were recently awarded the 2019 Samuel and Ronnie Heyman Prize for Outstanding Scholarly Publication or Research.
The prize is given to junior faculty members in the humanities.
Rohit De
The type of salamander called axolotl, with its frilly gills and widely spaced eyes, looks like an alien and has other-worldly powers of regeneration. Lose a limb, part of the heart or even a large portion of its brain? No problem: They grow back.
“It...
What do John of Patmos, Mary Shelley, and George A. Romero have in common? Each is responsible for an apocalypse.
Stories about the world ending have been around almost as long as written literature — since well before John’s Book of Revelation, Shelley’s...