Christopher Lane
The Distortion of Grief
CHICAGO – How long does it take to mourn the death of a loved one? The question is peculiar, even mildly offensive. Recovery from bereavemen…
Please note that articles not available in your chosen language are displayed in English. Articles available in your chosen language feature a flag in the top left corner of the accompanying image.
CHICAGO – How long does it take to mourn the death of a loved one? The question is peculiar, even mildly offensive. Recovery from bereavemen…
MADRID – Unsere Gehirne sind wie ein dichter Wald – ein komplexes, anscheinend undurchdringliches Dickicht aus interagierenden Neuronen, das…
LEUVEN – Vielleicht sind wir uns dessen nicht ganz bewusst, aber zukünftige Generationen werden unsere Zeit als wahrhaft historisch betracht…
PHILADELPHIA – Eltern haben wohl vor nichts mehr Angst, als ein Kind durch Unfall oder Krankheit zu verlieren. Und Krebs im Kindesalter hat …
WASHINGTON, DC – Weil die Informationstechnologien (IT) unser tägliches Leben so schnell verwandelt haben, vergessen wir leicht, wie sehr si…
MELBOURNE – James Holmes, der beschuldigt wird, in einem gut besuchten Kino in Aurora, Colorado, Feuer gelegt zu haben, war nicht vorbestraf…
LONDON – Die schädlichen Nebenwirkungen von Medikamenten sind weltweit Thema in den Schlagzeilen. Schließlich lassen sich Horrorgeschichten …
ZÜRICH – Der Rinderwahnsinn in Großbritannien, der die Schlachtung von 3,7 Millionen Kühen zur Folge hatte und die britische Viehindustrie s…
BOSTON – Eine der kontroversesten medizinischen Debatten wird heute um die Krebsfrüherkennung geführt, deren Vorteile offensichtlich scheine…
Do medical advances, like stem cell research, promise eternal youth or an ethical quagmire? With skyrocketing medical costs and aging populations, will even rich societies be unable to assure decent medical care for all? Are millions needlessly dying in poor countries because they suffer from diseases that do not affect the rich? What will be the payoff of the mapping of the human genome?
Medicine is being transformed by a scientific and technological revolution. But will new and better drugs and longer life spans come at too high a cost to our ethical and moral norms? The question is too important to be left to experts and accountants. Informed discussion requires that the public understand the social, economic, and political implications of today’s medical advances.
Survey after survey shows that readers look to their newspapers for news about improvements in medicine and their impact on health. Project Syndicate’s monthly series of commentaries on Health and Medicine brings cutting edge medical discoveries and thorny policy issues to newspaper readers everywhere. Committed to identifying and presenting ideas that demand wider attention, Project Syndicate is uniquely suited to “translate” the technology and ethics of state-of-the-art medicine into language that the broad public can understand.
The contributors include some of the world’s leading physicians, including Nobel laureates Paul Berg and Christian de Duve, and such renowned experts as Claude Kordon of the French Institute of Health and Medical Research, Harvard’s infectious disease expert Paul Farmer, Oxford University Professor of Physiology and Director of the Royal Institute Susan Greenfield, and Lennart Levi of Sweden’s Karolinska Institute.
Editing the series is Joanna Rose, science writer for Forskning & Framsteg magazine and producer of Swedish Radio’s “Filosofiska Rummet” program.
Show moreProject Syndicate produces video interviews with regular and featured authors, conducted by the editors of Project Syndicate. In these lively interviews, Project Syndicate contributors expand upon their ideas and analyses, and on the events and trends that their commentaries address. These pithy, compelling discussions are the perfect way to enhance the impact of commentaries that you receive from Project Syndicate.
Complimentary English-language podcasts are provided with the majority of our commentaries. Podcasts are a stimulating complement to Project Syndicate content, and an easy means of integrating a popular media platform into your offerings.
Project Syndicate works with NewsArt, a collective of artists who create graphics that wittily allude to the topics addressed in the commentaries that they accompany. These inventive representations of the controversies and events of the day provide eye-catching counterparts to the news that you report.
With each column that we distribute, we offer a selection of NewsArt graphics that are available for immediate purchase with a simple click of your mouse. You may then use those images alongside Project Syndicate commentaries, or as a means of enhancing your own content.