Reducing Global Traffic Deaths With Seatbelts and Other Technology
More widespread use of seatbelts and other vehicle safety technologies could substantially reduce traffic deaths in low- and middle-income countries, according to a recent study.
More widespread use of seatbelts and other vehicle safety technologies could substantially reduce traffic deaths in low- and middle-income countries, according to a recent study.
Stay up to date, maintain your CME with the latest research, author interviews, apps, and learning courses from JAMA and the Specialty Journals.
Stay up to date, maintain your CME with the latest research, author interviews, apps, and learning courses from JAMA and the Specialty Journals.
Stay up to date, maintain your CME with the latest research, author interviews, apps, and learning courses from JAMA and the Specialty Journals.
This clinical trial examines the effect of an antibiotic stewardship bundle (education, feedback, and real-time multidrug-resistant organism risk-based CPOE prompts) vs routine stewardship on antibiotic…
This clinical trial examines the effect of an antibiotic stewardship bundle (education, feedback, and real-time multidrug-resistant organism risk-based CPOE prompts) vs routine stewardship on antibiotic…
This Viewpoint discusses the proliferation of Medicare Advantage plans targeting specific groups of individuals and whether these plans will improve quality of care for beneficiaries.
This essay describes the author’s experience with a patient that illustrates what undocumented individuals living in Florida are experiencing due to Bill 1718.
This cohort study evaluates whether door-to-treatment time is associated with outcome among patients with anticoagulation-associated intracerebral hemorrhage treated with reversal interventions.
This diagnostic study evaluates mechanistic differences in disease severity in pediatric appendicitis.
This cohort study assesses the increase in second primary malignant neoplasms and T-cell malignant neoplasm cases associated with chimeric antigen receptor–T cells.