Truth, Lies, or Marketing?
How health misinformation circulates in the age of social media and how you can protect yourself and combat its spread.
How health misinformation circulates in the age of social media and how you can protect yourself and combat its spread.
Brigham patients and experts share their science-backed steps for sustainable health and well-being.
Vaccines have helped double lifespans in many nations over the past 200 years. Learn how to counter misinformation around vaccines.
Improving tools and eliminating obstacles provides everyone with better paths to the right care.
Misinformation makes it more challenging than ever to get or provide the right care at the right time.
Bonnie Slater-Demont suffered a stroke in the middle of the night. From the moment they reached the Brigham, Bonnie and her husband, Richard, trusted she would receive excellent care—and are so grateful that she did.
Mass General Brigham’s mobile medical Community Care Vans deliver a broad menu of mobile medical services.
In this video series, emergency medicine physicians from the Brigham and Mass General Brigham give helpful info and advice for getting through the unexpected.
Rebecca Robbins, MD, talks with the “Today” show about sleep myths and tips for getting better rest.
Experts collaborate, share insights, and build momentum toward the future of cancer care at Mass General Brigham.
Birth doulas offer emotional, physical, and informational support to expectant parents along the journey.
Abigail Waldman, MD, FAAD, appears on the Brigham’s Instagram to discuss three skin cancer facts people may not know.
We asked thought leaders across the Brigham to share their insights and experiences.
On servant leadership, opportunity, and unlikely heroes
The pill-like device could transform how life-threatening events are monitored and prevented.
Mass General Brigham Home Hospital delivers care to eligible patients who would otherwise need to be hospitalized.
Being inclusive of all people is necessary for delivery high-quality, equitable care, and can save lives.
This gender-inclusive glossary includes some essential terms and definitions for understanding sex, gender, and well-being.
For decades, medical research focused almost exclusively on men. Brigham physician-researchers are working to balance the scales for women’s health.
Building on its 50-year legacy, the Brigham’s Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology is working toward reproductive justice for all patients.
The Brigham’s Center for Transgender Health is breaking barriers and providing state-of-the-art, life-changing care for trans and gender diverse people.
How do sex hormones fluctuate through the years? This gender-inclusive infographic timeline explores the links between sex hormones and health.
We asked thought leaders across the Brigham to share their insights and experiences.
On sex, gender, and the wilderness of the scientific process.
Scientists are uncovering why women are more likely than men to experience long COVID symptoms.
More than 47% of Brigham clinician-scientists are women, 13 of whom were ranked as the best female scientists in the world in a 2022 Research.com survey.
A research team is using a new cell therapy approach to eliminate tumors and train the immune system to prevent cancers from recurring.
The Brigham is leading research and care to better understand and treat brain diseases in women.
Forging the road toward a more inclusive healthcare system is a vital commitment we must make.
Shalender Bhasin, MD, examines facts and myths surrounding male body image disorders and related anabolic steroid use.
Brigham researchers are shedding light on an alarming amount of sleep misinformation online.
Hear from young people in the Racial Recognition and Healing Project as they navigate structural racism, advantage, and social change.
The Brigham’s first Black president reflects on resilience and equity.
Brigham leaders discuss how feelings of belonging can boost resiliency and well-being, especially in the workplace.
Chief Resident Anita Chary, MD, PhD, shares her perspective as an emerging medical leader.
“The past isn’t dead.
Making genomic research more equitable
Brigham researchers lay the groundwork for equity in telehealth.
Brigham experts discuss how incarceration affects the health of individuals and communities.
As a humanitarian crisis unfolded in Afghanistan last summer, neurosurgeon Ali Aziz-Sultan, MD, shared his family’s story and how it shapes his surgical practice today.
Enjoy this calming tour through the human brain, thanks to the Brigham’s advanced brain circuit imaging technology.
Joel T. Katz, MD, shares insights for engaging in dialogues about racism.
A vigil for Black lives at the Brigham in 2020 drew hundreds in the community to reflect on racial injustice and spark change.
The Skin of Color Dermatology Program pays special attention to the skincare needs of patients of color.
Check out our editors' recommended resources for learning more about racial justice in medicine and society.
Historically revered thinkers spread false claims that racial differences reflect different biology, genetics, and even character.
Racially biased findings have permeated clinical research, even in recent decades.
Watch CNBC’s interview with Robert Green, MD, MPH, about the Brigham’s Preventive Genomics Clinic.
How Brigham infectious diseases experts led research to prevent, diagnose, and treat COVID-19.
Brigham researchers explain why the measles vaccine is more important than we knew.
The Brigham’s first Black department chair reflects on her life’s journeys and passions.
The COVID-19 pandemic has challenged the Brigham community, and the world, like never before.
Stopping the spread of disease, misinformation, and science resistance
Three decades of data suggests following four or five healthy habits is linked to nearly 10 more years free of chronic disease.
Ensuring diversity in COVID-19 vaccine trials means engaging people where they live, work, and socialize, and giving back to the community.
A closer look at infectious diseases and how medicines tackle them.
Misinformation can be powerful and destructive, but simple tools can help people separate fact from fiction.
The life-changing effects of small steps—and a buddy system.
In the toughest times, the Brigham has always been a community of helpers and healers.
The six essential preventive health screenings to keep up with during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Brain Health Champion initiative helps patients protect their cognitive health through nutrition, exercise, and other activities.
Brigham clinicians and scientists reflect on unforgettable moments and lessons they learned this year.
Physician Katherine Rose, MD, offers tips for talking about mental health with your primary care doctor.
Mummies scanned at the Brigham reveal clues about heart disease.
On her unique perspective from the intersection of trauma, surgery, and palliative care.
In addition to protecting against heart disease, the Mediterranean diet may have benefits for preventing depression.
Parents often text and drive, according to new research from the Brigham.
When gun violence changed Yoselín Rodríguez’s life forever, support from her loved ones and community helped her find strength, healing, and courage.
Medical gaming is an example of new and innovative ways to support patients struggling with addiction.
Student-athlete Alex White and Brigham experts discuss the importance of education in managing pain after injury to ensure the best outcomes.
To raise awareness for congenital heart disease, Brigham staff, nurses, and doctors made 500 red hats for their newborn patients.
Regan Bergmark, MD, discusses her distracted driving research in this Boston 25 News interview.
Is climate change making people sicker? Multi-disciplinary experts, convened by the Osher Center for Integrative Medicine, explore this question together.
Ancient history and literature often illuminate modern times.
Brigham surgeons and scientists are expanding options for patients in need of an organ donation.
Featuring the latest science and advice from the Brigham's experts, this audio series explores buzzworthy topics for healthy living.
Get a closer look as the imaging team studies 16th-century mummies for historic health insights.
Our experts debunk myths in mental health care.
A podcast about the origins of the opioid crisis and the science of pain.
A podcast about what the medical community is doing to address the opioid epidemic.
One person's treatment is another's threat of addiction. The Brigham community takes on the opioid crisis.
After their infant son lost hearing, medical researchers Sharon and Gary Curhan were determined to improve care for hearing disorders.
Healthcare thought leaders Atul Gawande, MD, MPH, and Vivek Murthy, MD, MBA, discuss the path forward through the opioid crisis.
These Brigham-based health educators cross the country to help physicians make better prescribing choices.
Nurses’ Health Study uncovers clues to improve health
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Revolutionizing how doctors predict, find, treat, and prevent disease
Watch as the newborn MRI system arrives by crane to be installed in its new home in the NICU.
Our nutrition experts explain how much of this popular dietary supplement is too much.
Christine King shares how her surgery at the Brigham to remove her brain tumor changed her life.
The Student Success Jobs Program marks its 18th year at the Brigham.
A special visitor made a heart transplant patient’s day.
How the Laham family counted on the Brigham’s NICU nurses.
Learn how Brigham neurosurgeon Alexandra Golby, MD creates maps of patients’ brains.
Astronauts train in the STRATUS Center to prepare for medical emergencies in space.
The lab of Yu Shrike Zhang, PhD, is developing organs-on-a-chip systems to model human organs at the microscale and test new drugs.
Shuichi Mizuno, PhD, created a new technology to rapidly grow new cartilage cells for people with joint damage.
Bioengineers including Hadi Shafiee, PhD, developed a smartphone-based screening for male fertility.
The Brigham iHub is helping researchers design promising new digital health tools.
The human touch of healthcare’s digital revolution
Hear how doctors like Robert Green, MD, MPH, help people understand results of home genetic testing.
Researchers have found a way to deliver HIV therapy with just one weekly pill.
Faced with daunting medical challenges, bioengineers build instruments of hope for patients in need.
Laurie Cox, PhD, shares connections researchers are discovering between the gut and the brain.
Keith Dreyer, DO, PhD, explains how artificial intelligence will transform healthcare.
Pursuing deeper insights into human health
Mom Sedina Amuzu describes her emotional journey with her daughter, Brianna, who received care in the Newborn Intensive Care Unit after weighing under two pounds at birth.
Scientists are discovering the disease-fighting benefits of cocoa.
Staying asleep can be harder as the years go by. Charles Czeisler, PhD, MD, and Elizabeth Klerman, MD, PhD, explain why.
When teenager Manuel Sanchez Paniagua’s lung cancer began to spread, his radiation oncologists worked quickly to find him the right treatment in time.
Cynthia Lemere, PhD, is investigating whether Alzheimer’s disease can be prevented, delayed, or slowed by immunotherapy.
For patients with aggressive cancers and neurologic diseases, immunotherapies offer a new path forward.
Learn how BWH is speeding critical information and treatments to patients at risk for inheriting cardiovascular disorders.
Elledge and his colleagues discuss his work and contributions to science.
Lauren Stetson discusses her participation in the BabySeq Project with primary investigator Robert Green, MD, MPH.
Learn more about the latest recommendations from JoAnn Manson, MD, DrPH.
David M. Levine, MD, describes his pilot project to safely bring hospital services to patients in their homes.
Meet researchers who are finding new avenues to precisely control inflammation.
Andreas Gomoll, MD, shares new advances in joint preservation.
War veteran Brandon Korona successfully undergoes a new experimental amputation.
Heart transplant recipient Brian Wade meets the family of his donor.
Learn more about how Will Lautzenheiser’s double arm transplant has changed his life.
Go inside the Evergrande Center for Immunologic Diseases to see how its leaders are tackling inflammation underlying many diseases.
Hear how BWH helped him overcome a severe drug allergy.
With immune-related issues of the rise, it’s timely and timeless to devote this issue to the immune system.
Betsy Nabel, MD, shares her optimism for the future of medical problem solving and innovation.
Hear some members of Brigham and Women’s Faulkner Hospital’s Stroke Support Group talk about their worry-free weekend at the camp.
Meet three patients who are already benefiting from the innovation and collaboration housed in this state-of-the-art facility.
Atul Gawande, MD, MPH, moderates a panel with President Barack Obama and healthcare innovators at the Conference.
Jorge Plutzky, MD, director of preventive cardiology at BWH, shares stories.
The Brigham Baby Academy encourages parents to read to their babies early and often.
New research from BWH hints certain interventions may be equally or more effective than statin medications for cholesterol.
Colored 3D diffusion imaging—using MRI technology and computer analysis—maps the brain’s white matter tracts, or fibers.
Charles Czeisler, MD, PhD, chief of the Division of Sleep and Circadian disorders, discusses the consequences of sleep deprivation
A six-hour flight from Boston to London can cause worse jet lag than flying nearly the same distance from Boston to Los Angeles.
Waking up on a chilly winter morning seems to aggravate chronic joint pain associated with arthritis.
Betsy Nabel, MD, reflects on the opening of the Building for Transformative Medicine.
BWH’s chair of the Department of Emergency Medicine describes dangerous conditions faced by MDs, nurses, and humanitarian workers.
400 million blood draws are performed each year in the U.S.
Learn more about the Building for Transformative Medicine, one of the most advanced patient care and research facilities in USA.
Radiologists can identify an abnormal mammogram in half a second, according to a recent Brigham and Women’s Hospital (BWH) study.
Big Iron moves into the Building for Transformative Medicine.