How to Gladden a Wealthy Mind
By J. PEDER ZANE
Why doesn’t more money always buy more happiness? A growing body of research is showing that modern work demands and brain’s chemistry are mostly to blame.
Why doesn’t more money always buy more happiness? A growing body of research is showing that modern work demands and brain’s chemistry are mostly to blame.
We’ll never know what medical breakthroughs were missed because young scientists were not provided with resources.
A main reason for a lag in the detection of celiac disease is the long and confusing list of signs and symptoms, some of which may be mild enough to be easily ignored or attributed to another condition.
The research is based on men, whose clutching of the chest and sudden collapse bears little resemblance to the experience of most women.
Of course it was fine to have a rabbi visit the hospital, I told my patient’s son. It was only as they were about to enter the room that I noticed that the rabbi was carrying a white chicken in his arms.
He wanted his body given to a medical school or research organization. It wasn’t that simple.
Cancer treatment and its aftereffects can prompt a cleaning binge and emptying of shelves. But for what, exactly, are we making room?
My inability to type has become a funny, disarming moment in an otherwise usually serious encounter between surgeon and patient, helping to mitigate some of the tension that can develop.
In the news: coffee consumption, robotic-assisted surgery, and high-intensity workouts. Test your knowledge of this week’s health news.
Simple precautions can prevent a nasty reaction from contact with poison ivy and related plants, which can harm even those who have had previous uneventful exposures.
How do you feed two children in a family when one is overweight and one is underweight?
Suleika Jaouad, a writer from Saratoga Springs, N.Y., is chronicling her experiences as a young adult with cancer.
The focus of our laws should shift from punishment to treatment.
Suleika Jaouad writes about facing cancer in your 20s.
People who are functioning normally despite severe mental illness.