[ultimate_heading main_heading=”Latest” alignment=”left” main_heading_font_family=”font_family:|font_call:” main_heading_style=”font-weight:900;” main_heading_font_size=”desktop:44px;” sub_heading_font_family=”font_family:|font_call:” sub_heading_style=”font-weight:700;” sub_heading_font_size=”desktop:20px;” main_heading_margin=”margin-bottom:30px;”]Recent news and stories from the Mass General Research Institute.[/ultimate_heading]
In a new study published in Environmental Health Perspectives, a team of researchers investigated the potential connection between exposure to flame retardant chemicals found in household products— ca Read more
Proposed reductions in U.S. foreign aid would have a devastating impact on HIV treatment and prevention programs in countries receiving such aid, an international team of investigators reports. In the Read more
Here are nine helpful tips on writing journal articles by Anne Marie Weber-Main, PhD, and Anne Joseph, MD, MPH, from the University of Minnesota. Read more
Mass General researchers working to stop the spread of infectious disease are worried that proposed cuts to the NIH budget would eliminate a key resource for global health efforts. Read more
Massachusetts General Hospital was established to provide care to Boston's sick, regardless of socioeconomic status—an innovative idea in 1811. In the words of our founder, Dr. John Warren, “When in d Read more
Mass General researchers have developed a new forecasting model that has the potential to pinpoint when a migraine will strike by tracking an individual’s stress levels over time. Read more
The Union of Concerned Scientists blog recently published a post discussing ways in which communicating science can benefit the scientist. Here are a few of our takeaways from this great article. Read more
n a recent study published in the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, Massachusetts General Hospital researchers share new findings about the link between loss of appetite and loss of smell Read more
In a case of mistaken identity, researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital have found that lymph nodes are not always responsible for cancer’s deadly progression to other organs. Read more