MyBlueDots

How news coverage distorts America’s leading causes of death

Even though they receive minimal health care funding, chronic diseases are the leading cause of death in the United States. They account for 70% of deaths in the U.S. annually, with 6 in 10 Americans suffering from at least one chronic condition. However, coverage of this public health crisis is eclipsed by coverage of risks such as homicide and terrorism—incidents that are far more likely to grab readers’ attention.
Read More

Telemedicine’s rise: A potential check on low-value medical testing

Low-value care—medical tests and procedures that provide little to no benefit to patients—contributes to excess medical spending and both direct and cascading harms to patients. A research team from Mass General Brigham and their collaborators have found that telemedicine may help to reduce the use of low-value tests. The work is published in JAMA Internal Medicine.
Read More

Machine learning tool decodes immune receptor sequences to diagnose multiple diseases

Stanford University researchers developed a machine learning-based method capable of diagnosing multiple diseases using B cell and T cell receptor sequences. The model, called Machine learning for Immunological Diagnosis (Mal-ID), distinguished between COVID-19, HIV, lupus, type 1 diabetes, influenza vaccination response, and healthy states, achieving near-perfect classification.
Read More
Top