US study shows post-COVID rebound in inappropriate antibiotic prescribing
After a brief dip in March 2020, the proportion of people who received one or more inappropriate antibiotic prescriptions returned to pre-pandemic levels by the end of 2021.
After a brief dip in March 2020, the proportion of people who received one or more inappropriate antibiotic prescriptions returned to pre-pandemic levels by the end of 2021.
The Defend the Flock Resource Center brings together biosecurity information and free resources from USDA and other experts.
One percent of scientific articles published in 2023 showed signs of generative AI’s potential involvement, according to a recent analysis
The Neighborhood Atlas allows for rankings of neighborhoods by socioeconomic status disadvantage in a region of interest (e.g., at the state or national level). It…
Wellness officers? Code Lavender teams? Mindfulness meditation? These aren’t the solutions to physician burnout and moral injury.
Officially, only one person has caught the illness during the current outbreak. But with limited testing, cases could be flying under the radar.
Instead of just asking questions about how exercise helps our bodies, let’s also consider how it helps our brains
This Viewpoint explores existing payment models and waste elimination incentives and proposes a new approach to addressing waste in health care.
The role of infection preventionists (IPs) has evolved significantly over 75 years, from early surveillance of nosocomial infections to becoming data-driven experts navigating pandemics like…
All vaccines have at least occasional side effects. But people who say they were injured by Covid vaccines believe their cases have been ignored.
Debate rages over which languages can claim to have the earliest origin