What to know about the kind of skin cancer Jill Biden was treated for
Basia Marie Michalski, MD, assistant professor of dermatology
‘U.S. workers are becoming more diverse — but companies aren’t keeping up’
Sociologist Adia Harvey Wingfield, in Arts & Sciences, studies gender and racial inequality in the workplace and writes that while the United States workforce has increased in diversity, employers’ policies and hiring practices aren’t making enough progress.
This Is Your Body On A 10-Minute Walk
Marta Stojanovic, postdoctoral research assistant in psychological & brain sciences
Young, Educated American Men ‘Quiet Quit’ Jobs the Most During Covid
Yongseok Shin, professor of economics
Satellite images show crowds at China’s crematoriums as covid surges
Mai He, MD, PhD, professor of pathology & immunology
US approves Alzheimer’s drug that modestly slows disease
Joy Snider, MD, PhD, professor of neurology
People who haven’t had COVID will likely catch XBB.1.5 – and many will get reinfected, experts say
Ziyad Al-Aly, MD, assistant professor of medicine
Eisai, Biogen get U.S. FDA approval for Alzheimer’s drug, apply for full approval
Erik Musiek, MD, PhD, assistant professor of neurology
‘We’re Going to Need Everybody’: Recordings Captured Response to N.F.L. Crisis
Matthew Matava, MD, professor of orthopedic surgery
Making sweat feel spiritual didn’t start with SoulCycle – a religion scholar explains
The next time you hear a friend assert that fitness is their new religion, know that it might not be just hyperbole. Rather, it reflects how religious meanings attached to the body have endured, transformed – and are now available for purchase at the nearest fitness studio, writes Cody Musselman.
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