Amy Dockser Marcus in the Wall Street Journal
Amy Dockser Marcus (2006 Awardee) authored "One Reporter, Four Families, Six Scientists and the Search to Cure a Rare Disease" in the Wall Street Journal, February 28, 2014.
Amy Dockser Marcus (2006 Awardee) authored "One Reporter, Four Families, Six Scientists and the Search to Cure a Rare Disease" in the Wall Street Journal, February 28, 2014.
Amy Dockser Marcus (Alumna 2006) wrote a news article in "The Wall Street Journal" titled, "In Science, Inspiration Can Come From Unlikely Places" on April 6, 2016
Amy Dockser Marcus (2006 Awardee) published "People With Intellectual Disabilities Get a Say in Drug Trials" on the Wall Street Journal, March 10, 2014.
Amy Dockser Marcus (Alumna 2006) wrote a news article in The Wall Street Journal titled, "Brain Implant Helps Restore Movement for Paralyzed Patient, Researchers Say" on April 13, 2016
Amy Dockser Marcus (2006 Awardee) authored "'Hackathons' Aim to Solve Health Care's Ills" in the Wall Street Journal, April 4, 2014.
Sandro Galea (alumnus 2006) wrote a news article in "The Wall Street Journal" titled, "How to Make Cities Healthier Places to Live" on April 24, 2016
Amy Dockser Marcus (2006 Awardee) published "Big Data Treasure Trove From Routine Medical Checkups" on the Wall Street Journal, May 12, 2014.
Amy Dockser Marcus (2006 Awardee) wrote "The Mystery of ALS Patients Who See Improvement" in The Wall Street Journal, June 13, 2016.
Aaron Kesselheim (2009 Awardee) was quoted in "Can Pharma Sales Reps Influence Prescibing for Unapproved Uses?" on the Wall Street Journal, June 9, 2014.
Amy Dockser Marcus (2006 Awardee) wrote "With Driverless Cars, a Safety Dilemma Arises" in The Wall Street Journal, June 23, 2016. She also wrote "When the Seriously Ill Want to Donate Organs" in The Wall Street Journal, June 24, 2016.