Health & Medicine
Building a better skin barrier
Skin is a barrier meant to keep small invaders out. Products making their way across it should boost that mission.
By Anna Gibbs
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Skin is a barrier meant to keep small invaders out. Products making their way across it should boost that mission.
We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.
Managing diabetes with injections is challenging. Joining insulin to a skin-penetrating polymer was as effective as shots at regulating blood sugar.
Recent U.S. decisions about vaccines signal bigger changes to come that could threaten the foundation of the national childhood immunization schedule.
In 2025, the Trump administration froze or ended about 5,300 NIH and NSF research grants totaling over $5 billion in unspent funds, a decision that reshaped many fields of science.
Battles between the Trump administration and academic institutions are putting important biomedical advances in limbo.
A carefully crafted figure of a goose and a woman suggests that art reflecting spiritual beliefs entered a new phase among early villagers in the Middle East.
The drug enlicitide reduced cholesterol for adults with high levels due to an inherited disorder and may also work for a broader population.
Interruptions, to-do lists, lack of autonomy — “time poverty” depends more on perceived shortages of time than actual ones, recent research suggests.
After a decades-long hiatus, new world screwworm populations have surged in Central America and Mexico — and are inching northward.
A child-friendly brain imaging technique is just one way neuroscientist Cat Camacho investigates how children learn to process emotions.
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