![](https://webarchive.library.unt.edu/dentonfracking/20141029182600im_/http://media.npr.org/assets/img/2014/10/28/millennial-check-up_wide-d7aa55a17db3c7a69855f9bce04de9385257b760-s6-c15.jpg)
Young adults seem to be taking advantage of health coverage. But they're still skipping the flu shot.Image Source/Corbishide caption
Magnified 25,000 times, this digitally colorized scanning electron micrograph shows Ebola virus particles (green) budding from an infected cell (blue).CDC/NIADhide caption
Caltech biochemical engineer Frances Arnold was awarded a National Medal of Technology and Innovation by President Obama in 2013.Jason Reed/Reuters/Landovhide caption
Caribous doing their business in mountain ice have left a viral record hundreds of years old.Courtesy of Brian Moormanhide caption
Getting stronger before surgery has been shown to help cancer patients do better long term. iStockphoto hide caption
Ebola patient Amber Vinson arrived by ambulance at Emory University Hospital on Oct. 15. Now healthy, Vinson was discharged from the hospital Tuesday. Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images hide caption
Home health care workers Jasmine Almodovar (far right) and Artheta Peters (center) take part in a Cleveland rally for higher pay on Sept. 4. Sarah Jane Tribble/WCPN, Ideastream hide caption
Magnified 25,000 times, this digitally colorized scanning electron micrograph shows Ebola virus particles (green) budding from an infected cell (blue). CDC/NIAD hide caption
Gilead's once-a-day pill for hepatitis C is the latest expensive and effective treatment that insurers say is a business challenge. Courtesy of Business Wire hide caption
Young adults seem to be taking advantage of health coverage. But they're still skipping the flu shot. Image Source/Corbis hide caption
Caltech biochemical engineer Frances Arnold was awarded a National Medal of Technology and Innovation by President Obama in 2013. Jason Reed/Reuters/Landov hide caption
A woman on the L train in New York City last week covers her face, fearful because a doctor with Ebola rode the train days earlier. Epidemiologists say people on the subway were not at risk. Stephen Nessen /WNYC hide caption
Caribous doing their business in mountain ice have left a viral record hundreds of years old. Courtesy of Brian Moorman hide caption
Dr. Angela Alday talks with Isidro Hernandes, via a Spanish-speaking interpreter, Armando Jimenez. Both patient and doctor say they much prefer an in-person interpreter to one on the phone. Jeff Schilling/Courtesy of Tuality Healthcare hide caption
A corneal inlay next to a contact lens. Courtesy of John Vukich hide caption
The Appalachian Medicinal Herb Growers Consortium's goal is to raise plants that meet the quality standards demanded by clinical practitioners. Blue Ridge Center for Chinese Medicine hide caption
This matters a lot, even if there's not an Ebola patient at the hospital. Wavebreak Media LTD/Wavebreak/Corbis hide caption
A lone Mayo Clinic wheelchair sits on the Cascade Creek walking trail near Kutzky Park in Rochester, Minn. Elizabeth Baier/MPR News hide caption