Sleep Medicine Works: The Difference is Night and Day
Sleep Medicine Works: The Difference is Night and Day by Dr. Swathy Karamchedu This digital illustration shows the transformation that happens when sleep medicine steps in, through a split portrait of Fukuro, an anthropomorphic owl.
Eye Contact
Eye Contact by Pepper Powell I drew a picture of my own retina, using a photograph from my old job. The optic nerve (left) channels blood and nervous impulses from the retina to the brain.
Respira Flora
Respira Flora by Milani Patel This piece came from, quite simply, my love of art and my love of medicine. It reflects the mirrored relationship between the human body and the natural world. One lobe
Sevaro’s Children’s Health Literacy project
Sevaro’s Children’s Health Literacy project Interview with Dr. Raj Narula Dr. Rajiv Narula, a stroke neurologist and founder of Sevaro, has taken an unconventional approach to prevention : educating children. In this interview, he discusses
Renaissance Man: How Aaron Anderson Is Transforming Medical Education Through the Art of Theater
Renaissance Man: How Aaron Anderson Is Transforming Medical Education Through the Art of Theater by Joe McMenamin Aaron Anderson, PhD, is a Renaissance man. He is a military veteran, an ordnance expert, an actor, a
Bridging Medicine and Art: VCU’s Innovative Approach to Healing and Education
Bridging Medicine and Art: VCU’s Innovative Approach to Healing and Education Interviewed by Joe McMenamin VCUarts, the art and design school at Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU), is perhaps the best-known and most widely recognized of
The Future of Healthcare is in the Home
The Future of Healthcare is in the Home By Joe McMenamin and Joel Embry Why Care is Moving Home In 2040, health professionals will care for patients primarily in their homes, in person and virtually.
The Age of Prevention: When Healthcare Puts Itself Out of Business
The Age of Prevention: When Healthcare Puts Itself Out of Business By Christian Milaster It’s April 20, 2040, and traditional outpatient care has just passed away. The last waiting room closed its doors in Washington,
Prevention First: Rebalancing a Century-Old Medical Curriculum
Prevention First: Rebalancing a Century-Old Medical Curriculum By Chul S. Hyun, MD, PhD, MPH U.S. medicine has often been described as largely reactive, shaped in part by the biomedical training model established by the 1910

