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14 Questions About Our Leaders’ Health
Voters deserve transparency.
By Robert Klitzman
Voters deserve transparency.
By Robert Klitzman
We have the tools we need to stop the disease in 2024. Let’s use them.
By Ina Park
What to know about a new U.S. policy.
By Tom Inglesby, Anita Cicero and Marc Lipsitch
We need to rethink how we assess and evaluate physical and mental fitness for the presidency.
By Jeffrey Kuhlman
The best supplements are exercise, a good diet and strong relationships.
By Brad Stulberg
The president is a classic aging case playing out for the country to watch.
By Rachael Bedard
We’re seeing what a modern disinformation operation run by the U.S. looks like. It’s not pretty.
By David Wallace-Wells
Some kids are unable to get the care they need because of a shortage of pediatricians, and the problem could get worse.
By Aaron E. Carroll
It’s time to use warning labels to steer people away from food that’s bad for them.
By Kat Morgan and Mark Bittman
We live in an age when people can live longer and healthier even with significant health conditions. What does this mean for future presidents?
By Daniela J. Lamas
Democrats should rally around a bill to overhaul the 1873 anti-vice law.
By Michelle Goldberg
We had a chance to treat sex categories in sports with curiosity and compassion instead of condemnation. We still can.
By Michael Waters
The U.S. bombings that ended World War II didn’t mark the close of atomic warfare. They were just the beginning.
By W.J. Hennigan
Glenn Kramon discusses the coincidences that led him to realize how critical immigration was to his recent cancer battle.
By Glenn Kramon
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Here’s who needs to worry right now.
By Jennifer B. Nuzzo
Hospital outpatient departments, or HOPDs, are encouraging a surprise scourge on medical costs. It’s patients who bear the burden.
By Danielle Ofri
It’s time for decisive action to protect our young people.
By Vivek H. Murthy
The experience of living with my father’s dementia ranged from tragic to tragicomic to vaudevillian, often within the span of a few minutes.
By Cornelia Channing
A man reflects on his mother’s life with Alzheimer’s and what it has taught him as he faces his own diagnosis with the disease.
By Stephen Gettinger
How harm reduction can work in a red state.
By Maia Szalavitz
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