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Volume 30 Issue 1, January 2024

Series on Women’s Health

In this issue, Nature Medicine launches a Series on Women’s Health throughout the life course. Women’s health remains underserved by the medical research community, and the impacts of sex differences and sociocultural factors on the health and wellbeing of women are rarely considered. The first installment of this Series presents a Perspective calling for a life-course approach to the prevention and treatment of non-communicable diseases in women.

See Series

Image: Marina Spence. Cover design: Marina Spence

Editorial

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News Feature

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Correspondence

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World View

  • Social determinants of health can only be tackled through collaborations between public health leaders, economists, sociologists, and other non-medical stakeholders, as well as involvement from the community.

    • Ximena P. Garzon-Villalba
    World View
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Comment

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News & Views

  • New data show that electronic clinical decision support systems integrated with point-of-care tests can lead to meaningful reductions in antibiotic use in children in low- and middle-income countries, without compromising health outcomes — but investment in human resources is crucial to their success.

    • Sena Sayood
    • Julia Bielicki
    • Sumanth Gandra
    News & Views
  • As populations age, falls are an increasing public health problem; strategies to prevent them should incorporate new technologies and insights into the sensory, perceptual and motor systems controlling balance.

    • Sarah E. Lamb
    • Genevieve Williams
    • Will Young
    News & Views
  • The largest whole-genome sequencing study thus far has revealed myriad actionable alterations and potential biomarkers for 33 cancer types, but various logistical, technical and economic challenges must be overcome before this technique can become standard of care.

    • Dilara Akhoundova
    • Mark A. Rubin
    News & Views
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Research Briefings

  • A prognostic model for invasive breast cancer that is based on interpretable measurements of epithelial, stromal, and immune components outperforms histologic grading by expert pathologists. This model could improve clinical management of patients diagnosed with invasive breast cancer and address the concerns of pathologists about artificial intelligence (AI) trustworthiness by providing transparent and explainable predictions.

    Research Briefing
  • We deeply characterized the early-life gut virome, which consists mainly of bacteriophages (phages) and the diversity of which greatly exceeds bacterial diversity. The virome was associated with later asthma development, independently of the bacterial hosts of the phages; we further uncovered intriguing interactions with immune genetics.

    Research Briefing
  • Semaglutide, also known as Ozempic for treating type 2 diabetes and as Wegovy for treating obesity, compared with other weight management or diabetic medications, is not associated with higher risk of suicidal ideations in patients with obesity (or who are overweight) or patients with type 2 diabetes.

    Research Briefing
  • In one person with Parkinson’s disease, freezing of gait was averted through the use of a soft robotic apparel that provided a moderate level of hip-flexion assistance during the swing phase of walking. This approach delivered instantaneous effects and consistently improved walking quality and function across a range of conditions.

    Research Briefing
  • We profiled human central nervous system (CNS)-associated macrophages (CAMs) in anatomically dissected CNS interface tissue from typical, fetal and glioblastoma-affected brains using single-cell multi-omics and spatially resolved transcriptomic techniques. Analyses of CAM (and microglia) turnover rates in stem-cell-transplanted glioblastoma and prenatal tissues highlighted the developmental phenotypes of these cells in patients, which lays the groundwork for potential replacement therapies.

    Research Briefing
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Perspectives

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Consensus Statements

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Articles

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Analysis

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Amendments & Corrections

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