Women with heart attacks have higher survival rates when they’re treated by women
Seth Carnahan, associate professor of strategy
Democrats flood airwaves with health care ads, while GOP spots tout Trump in 2018 midterms
Steven Smith, the Kate M. Gregg Distinguished Professor of Social Science
Do women heart attack patients fare better with female doctors?
Seth Carnahan, associate professor of strategy
Women More Likely to Survive Heart Attacks If Treated by Female Doctors
Seth Carnahan, associate professor of strategy
Women More Likely to Survive Heart Attacks If They Are Treated by Women Doctors: Study
Seth Carnahan, associate professor of strategy
Dems zero in on Kavanaugh ties to judge in sexual harassment scandal
Daniel Epps, associate professor of law
New book on childhood obesity published
Denise E. Wilfley, of the Department of Psychiatry at the School of Medicine, is senior author of a newly published book that serves as a guide to using psychotherapy to treat childhood obesity.
Black voices, white voices: the cost of accents
John Baugh, the Margaret Bush Wilson Professor in Arts & Sciences
How to ruin cancer’s day
Jian Campian, MD, PhD, assistant professor of medicine; and Erik Herzog, professor of biology
The Moral Crusade
From civil rights and women’s suffrage to the Tea Party movement and #MeToo, moral crusades can shape an era. Arts & Sciences anthropologist and psychologist Pascal Boyer investigates why people get involved, how movements gain traction and what happens when they succeed.
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