In the News

Stop Telling People They’re Fighters Who Will ‘Beat’ Their Unsurvivable Disease – USA Today

Read article – An opinion piece by Kathryn Kirkland, professor of medicine and of the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, in which she discusses how metaphors invoking war, battle and the fighting spirit are commonly used in response to diagnoses of cancer, but that there is an unintended effect of assuming that fighters should battle against the disease: the missed opportunities to fight for things that are most important — and achievable. Those would include time with family, completion of estate planning, restoration of relationships, and even bucket lists.

Genetic Tests Are Everywhere, But How Reliable Are They? – The Boston Globe

Read article – Quotes H. Gilbert Welch, professor of medicine and of the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, and professor of economics, about the overuse of genetic tests. “In some ways it’s easy for us to try and find something definitive and act on that even though it has nothing to do with what is wrong with the patient,” says Welch. “Genetics is an amazing tool. . . but to what extent does that data predict something that you care about? Is it useful knowledge?”

New Hampshire Biologist Reacts to Gene-Editing Discovery – New Hampshire Union Leader

Read article – Quotes Bryan Luikart, assistant professor of molecular and systems biology, about a new study that reveals that scientists have successfully corrected a dangerous mutation in genes in human embryos, fixing a mutation that causes a common heart condition that can lead to sudden death later in life. “It is pretty amazing. It is a super-exciting time to be a scientist right now,” says Luikart, who was not involved in the study.