
Doctors and patients are sold on telehealth. Congress is still unsure about its long-term future
When the COVID-19 pandemic hit, Dr. Corey Siegel was more prepared than most of his peers. Half of Siegel’s patients—many with private insurance and
When the COVID-19 pandemic hit, Dr. Corey Siegel was more prepared than most of his peers. Half of Siegel’s patients—many with private insurance and
Dystopian fears are never far away when the conversation turns to advanced artificial intelligence. And even the CEO of the hottest A.I. company around right now says
Managers used to be—and to some extent still are—worried about what the Great Resignation could do to their workforces. But in 2023, employers may well be spending
The U.S. is poised to make COVID-19 vaccinations more like a yearly flu shot, a major shift in strategy despite a long list of questions about how to best protect
Starbucks, the coffee chain giant, is modifying its rewards program, and the news is full of stories of outraged consumers. The main focus of their ire is
The Food and Drug Administration said Thursday there are too many unknowns about CBD products to regulate them as foods or supplements under the agency’s current
Since the COVID-19 pandemic was declared in March 2020, a recurring topic of debate has been whether official COVID-19 death statistics in the U.S. accurately capture
Supporters of abortion rights filed separate lawsuits Wednesday challenging two states’ abortion pill restrictions, the opening salvo in what’s expected to be a
Bill Gates thinks that no country’s COVID response gets a top grade. “Nobody, I would say, gets an A on this one,” said the founder of the Bill &
Mayur Oza, a technical program manager at Google, was surprised by the email he received on Friday that told him he had just been laid off as part of a huge bloodletting