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Disease and Illnesses

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Photos: A Last Look at Fall

Before the weather turns cold, take one last walk in the woods with these beautiful autumn photos submitted by our readers
December 2012 | By Smithsonian.com

Open-Fire Stoves Kill Millions. How Do We Fix it?

Pollutants from crude stoves are responsible for many deaths – a D.C.-based NGO has a solution
December 2012 | By Ingfei Chen

Pardis Sabeti

Pardis Sabeti, the Rollerblading Rock Star Scientist of Harvard

The recipient of the Smithsonian American Ingenuity Award for natural sciences blazed a new view of how to treat infectious diseases via genetics
December 2012 | By Seth Mnookin

Doctors with Ebola patient

The Hunt for Ebola

A CDC team races to Uganda just days after an outbreak of the killer virus to try to pinpoint exactly how it is transmitted to humans
November 2012 | By Joshua Hammer

Malaria

Scientists Find a New Way to Exploit and Attack Malaria

The stealthy parasite kills one million people a year; there may be a drug that can stop its deadly damage
September 2012 | By Elizabeth Finkel

Egyptians embalming a corpse

The Gruesome History of Eating Corpses as Medicine

The question was not “Should you eat human flesh?” says one historian, but, “What sort of flesh should you eat?”
May 07, 2012 | By Maria Dolan

Aedes aegypti mosquito

The Next West Nile Virus?

The chikungunya virus has escaped Africa and is traveling around the world via a widespread, invasive, voracious mosquito
June 29, 2011 | By Carrie Arnold

Dr Druker with patient

A Triumph in the War Against Cancer

Oncologist Brian Druker developed a new treatment for a deadly cancer, leading to a breakthrough that has transformed medicine
May 2011 | By Terence Monmaney

Cambodia children with malaria

The Fatal Consequences of Counterfeit Drugs

In Southeast Asia, forensic investigators using cutting-edge tools are helping stanch the deadly trade in fake anti-malaria drugs
October 2009 | By Andrew Marshall

Culture of being rude

The Culture of Being Rude

A new biological theory states that cultural behavior is not just a regional quirk, but a defense against the spread of disease
August 03, 2009 | By Rob Dunn

Dr Carlo Croce in his lab

High Hopes for a New Kind of Gene

Scientists believe that microRNA may lead to breakthroughs in diagnosing and treating cancer
July 2009 | By Sylvia Pagán Westphal

Mexicans wear masks to prevent swine flu in Mexico City

Dreading the Worst When it Comes to Epidemics

A scientist by training, author Philip Alcabes studies the etymology of epidemiology and the cultural fears of worldwide disease
April 28, 2009 | By Abigail Tucker

Alisha Bacoccini is undergoing experimental gene therapy

Gene Therapy in a New Light

A husband-and-wife team's experimental genetic treatment for blindness is renewing hopes for a controversial field of medicine
January 2009 | By Jocelyn Kaiser

Aspen trees

What's Killing the Aspen?

The signature tree of the Rockies is in trouble
December 2008 | By Michelle Nijhuis

Chapel of All Saints, San Luis, Colorado

The 'Secret Jews' of San Luis Valley

In Colorado, the gene linked to a virulent form of breast cancer found mainly in Jewish women is discovered in Hispanic Catholics
October 2008 | By Jeff Wheelwright

How Breast Cancer Genes Work

Though we may talk of cancer as one disease, skin cancer has little in common with pancreatic cancer and breast cancer is something else entirely
October 2008 | By Sarah Zielinski

Tainted Tomatoes

A food-poisoning scare spurs debate
August 2008 | By Amanda Bensen

Wielding cameras bought on eBay, youngsters from an orphanage near Lusaka, Zambia, enjoy an afternoon safari led by Klaus Schoenwiese as part of his photography workshop. Left to right: Nicolas (peering through viewfinder), Thokodzile, Amos, Bobsisa, Charity, Mwewa, Faustina, Charles (standing) and Mary (in cap).

Point. Shoot. See

In Zambia, an NYC photographer teaches kids orphaned by AIDS how to take pictures. They teach him about living
November 2007 | By Jess Blumberg

One quality that makes Alicia J. Graf distinctive is “her gangliness, her long, lanky physique, kind of like a young colt,” says Judith Jamison, of the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater. “She’s so well trained and has such a wonderful long line already.”

Show Stopper

The classically trained dance star Alicia Graf showed true grit overcoming a career-threatening ailment
October 2007 | By Cathleen McGuigan

Trailed by reporters, Jimmy Carter launched his antimalaria initiative in the small community of Afeta. Some 50 million Ethiopians (Kemeru Gessese washes clothes in a river) live in regions where the disease is rampant.

The Ethiopia Campaign

After fighting neglected diseases in Africa for a quarter century, former president Jimmy Carter takes on one of the continent's biggest killers malaria
June 2007 | By Robert M. Poole


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