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From Cadavers to Virtual Reality: The Evolution of Anatomy Education 

Here’s something most people don’t know about the history of anatomy: public dissections used to be a spectator sport. In Renaissance Europe, anatomists like Andreas Vesalius would perform dissections in packed theaters: part scientific demonstration, part live event. People showed up. It was a thing.  Science has come a long way since then and so has the way it’s taught. And if you’re an educator or clinician with a stake in how anatomy gets passed down to the next generation of healthcare professionals, understanding that evolution isn’t just fascinating — it’s professionally relevant.  What Is Anatomy Education?  Anatomy education is the structured teaching of how the human body is built and how its parts work together. It’s an early step and a rite of passage in medical and healthcare training, and it’s been evolving continuously since the ancient Greeks started asking questions about what was going on inside the human body.  It’s also a field that never stops evolving. New tools, new research and a new understanding of how people actually learn have all pushed anatomy education forward. What worked for a small group of medical students in the 1800s doesn’t scale well to the demands of modern healthcare education.  How Was Anatomy Taught Before Modern Technology?  For most of medical history, anatomy education had one primary method: dissection

Can Humans Live Forever? 

Imagine celebrating your 150th birthday and still feeling like you did when you were 40.   Modern advances in genetics, medicine and biotechnology are leading scientists to reconsider what was once impossible: significantly expanding the human lifespan — and maybe even unlocking human immortality.  This article examines:  What human immortality means  How long humans can actually live  What scientists are doing to slow aging  What Do We Mean by Human Immortality?  Humans have always searched for a way to live forever, longing for that elusive Fountain of Youth. Today, that quest has a scientific name: human immortality, the idea of living indefinitely, free from biological aging.  The quest for immortality spans centuries and cultures:  Ancient Egypt had a large industry centered on death and immortality.  16th-century Europeans drank gold to slow down aging (yes, molten gold).  Modern companies like the Alcor Life Extension Foundation freeze bodies in the hopes that we can revive them in centuries to come.  As the world faces longer lifespans (the global 60+ population is expected to reach 2.1 billion by 2050) and lower fertility rates, scientists are tackling the age-old question: How can we extend our lifespans and eliminate aging?  How Long Can Humans Live?  The global human life expectancy today is a little over 70 years, but some experts believe humans could potentially live to 125.  In 2024, an estimated 722,000 centenarians were alive worldwide. While not everybody will reach 100, that’s a sign that medical advances and technology are slowly increasing how many of us live longer, healthier lives.  In 2025, a molecular biogerontology professor suggested humans could one day live to be 20,000 years old — provided science can combat aging. Futurist Ray Kurzweil goes further, claiming humans will achieve immortality by 2030 with the help of nanobots.  Still, living longer doesn’t necessarily mean living healthier. To understand what limits human lifespan, scientists are exploring the biology of aging and how it affects disease.  Why Biological Aging Makes Us Sick  Biological aging is the greatest risk factor for most diseases, including:  Heart disease  Cancer  Neurodegenerative conditions like Alzheimer’s disease  Scientists often use the term “inflammaging” to describe the slow buildup of inflammation in our bodies that causes age-related diseases over time.  Should Aging Be Classified as a Disease?  Some scientists argue that aging itself should be reclassified as a disease, which would transform how medicine approaches longevity.  Before the 1990s, osteoporosis was viewed as a normal part of aging. Today, it’s officially classified as a treatable disease caused by aging. Some scientists argue that aging could be reclassified in the same way.  If reclassified, the way medicine approaches longevity could undergo some major changes:  Researchers could develop drugs specifically targeting aging.  Clinical trials could focus on slowing the aging process.  Healthcare could shift from treating age-related diseases to preventing them.  Lifestyle adjustments could become necessary, not optional.  Can Scientists Actually Slow Aging?  Researchers are exploring several experimental approaches that suggest aging may not be as inevitable as we thought.  You may have heard of “biohacking”: trying supplements, therapies and other methods to slow aging

Medical Physiology and Pharmacology Careers: Where You Can Make an Impact 

Healthcare is one of the country’s fastest-growing sectors. But with a growing shortage of healthcare workers, there’s a real need for well-rounded professionals who are ready to step in and make a difference.  A graduate degree in medical physiology and pharmacology gives you exactly that kind of readiness: a deep understanding of how the human body works and how treatments affect it. That foundation translates across clinical research careers, biotechnology, consulting, education and more.   Benefits of a Medical Physiology and Pharmacology Degree  What sets a medical physiology and pharmacology degree apart is its range. Healthcare is changing fast, and professionals who understand only one corner of it can find themselves boxed in.   This degree imparts an understanding of human physiology and how treatments are designed to affect it: knowledge that moves with you as you narrow down your ideal career or pivot as your interests change.  That kind of dual perspective prepares you for opportunities in:  Healthcare  Pharmaceuticals  Biomedical research  Medical tech companies  Let’s look at a few career paths you can pursue.  Careers in Medical Physiology and Pharmacology   Clinical Research Associate (CRA)  Median salary: Around $72,000   Before any new drug reaches pharmacy shelves, it has to survive clinical trials. Clinical research has become a massive global field, with over 163,400 active studies underway in the U.S. alone in 2026.  As a CRA, you serve as the gatekeeper of new treatments and therapies, ensuring every data point is accurate and every participant is safe.   What you’ll do:  Travel to trial sites  Verify that ethical and legal protocols are followed   Your impact:  CRAs help ensure that new treatments are safe and trustworthy. They catch errors and maintain participant safety as treatments move from discovery to patient care.  Biostatistician  Median salary: $104,350   If you’re more interested in the story hidden behind the numbers than direct patient care, biostatistician could be the role for you. These “data wizards” bridge healthcare and data science, translating complex datasets into insights that inform medical decisions. Employment in this field is expected to grow by 8% through 2034.  What you’ll do:  Analyze clinical trials and build statistical models  Identify patterns in patient outcomes  Your impact:   Biostatisticians help global organizations like the World Health Organization (WHO) or Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) determine which treatments work and how to prevent disease outbreaks.  Pharmacologist  Median salary: About $189,000  Spending days in the lab isn’t for everyone. But for those passionate about discovering why a treatment works the way it does, a career as a pharmacologist can be incredibly rewarding

Cognitive Bias and Aging: How Ageism Shapes Our Perceptions

Between replaying the same song lyric on a loop and wondering what time it is in some completely random city, the brain is constantly busy — and constantly making shortcuts to process information quickly. These shortcuts have a name: cognitive bias. They help people move through the world quickly, but they can also lead to snap judgments. When this bias is turned toward aging, it can reinforce negative assumptions about older adults and contribute to ageism.In this article, we break down: How cognitive bias fuels age stereotyping Where those assumptions show up in everyday life Why age-based bias can have real consequences for older adults How Cognitive Bias Contributes to Age Stereotyping Ageism refers to stereotyping or discrimination based on age. It often shows up in the assumptions people attach to older adults, like when someone assumes an older coworker is uncomfortable with technology before ever watching them use it

Drug Treatment Resistance Explained: Why Some Drugs Stop Working 

“When I woke up just after dawn on September 28, 1928, I certainly didn’t plan to revolutionize all medicine by discovering the world’s first antibiotic, or bacteria killer. But I guess that was exactly what I did.”  —Alexander Fleming  Alexander Fleming wasn’t being modest. When he returned from summer vacation to his lab at St. Mary’s Hospital in London, he found that Penicillium notatum had contaminated his lab cultures of Staphylococcus aureus and — to his surprise — stopped the bacteria from growing.   That unexpected finding marked the beginning of antibiotics: powerful medicines that kill bacteria while leaving human cells unharmed.  Before antibiotics, everyday life was far more dangerous. A cut, graze or puncture — any break in the skin — could turn deadly

How Do Muscles Heal? Understanding Muscle Repair and Regeneration 

We’ve all been there at some point: You try a new workout, help a friend move or sprint after your toddler like you’re still 22.  The next morning, you sit down and immediately regret every life choice that led you there.  Post-exercise soreness — or even a full-blown muscle strain — can feel dramatic. But underneath those stiff muscles, something incredible is happening. Your body is running a highly coordinated muscle repair process designed to heal, rebuild and (in many cases) come back stronger.  In this article, we explore:  How muscle healing actually works  The stages of muscle healing  How long it takes for muscles to heal  Whether a torn muscle can heal itself  What helps (and hurts) muscle regeneration  What Happens When You Tear Muscle Fibers?  When you tear muscle fibers, the damaged cells break down, inflammation begins and your body immediately starts the repair process.  During exercise — like lifting weights, sprinting or stretching under load — you create microscopic tears within your muscles. If you’re training for strength or size, this is intentional. As those tiny tears repair, the muscle adapts and grows stronger

Age-Friendly Cities: Redesigning Communities for an Aging Population 

The next time you’re waiting at a busy crosswalk, watch the countdown clock. For a healthy 30-year-old, crossing feels routine. For an 80-year-old with a cane, those same seconds can feel rushed — even stressful.   Most of our streets, sidewalks and signals were designed decades ago, when Americans had much shorter average lifespans. Now, over 18% of U.S. adults are 65 or older, and that number is climbing. A new generation of community leaders are asking a critical question: How do we build an aging friendly city that works for all residents?   What Is an Age-Friendly City?  Age-friendly cities are places that deliberately adapt their environments, services and social support systems so residents can live well as they get older.   The concept started gaining global momentum in 2006, when the World Health Organization (WHO) launched an initiative encouraging cities to prepare for rapidly aging populations.  Why Age-Friendly Communities Matter: A Global Shift  In 2021, there were 761 million adults over 65 worldwide

Longevity Risk: How Living Longer Is Reshaping the Economy

Thanks to advances in medicine and public health, people are living longer than ever before, with average life expectancy now hovering around 78 years. Just over a century ago, that number was closer to 55. It’s a genuine win for individuals, but it creates a growing challenge for systems that were built around much shorter lifespans. As life expectancy increases, a new economic issue is becoming harder to ignore: longevity risk, or the economic strain that occurs when people live longer. In this article, we explore: What longevity risk is How the longevity economy is emerging The broader economic impact of an aging population What Is Longevity Risk? Longevity risk is what happens when people live longer than financial and care systems were built to support

The Evolution of the Human Body: What Has (and Hasn’t) Changed? 

Have you ever wondered why some people are naturally more athletic, or why humans look so different across the globe? The answers lie partly in human evolution, a field that traces back to Charles Darwin’s theories from the mid-1800s.   Paleoanthropology studies how our bodies changed over millions of years. And in this article, we’ll take a journey through the evolution of the human body and examine how our anatomy, brain, hands and voices gradually shaped who we are today.  Human Skeletal Evolution: When Our Ancestors Stood Upright  Our earliest ancestors were hominins, now-extinct early members of our human lineage. They were early primates who shared traits with chimpanzees and often lived in trees. One of the most famous examples gives us a glimpse into this transitional period.  Lucy (3.9 – 2.9 Million Years Ago)  Australopithecus afarensis, nicknamed “Lucy,” was one of the most complete fossils of an early human ancestor ever found. She appeared both ape-like and human

Multigenerational Living: Rethinking How America Supports Aging 

For most of human history, several generations living under one roof was simply how families worked. When the post-WWII suburban boom brought its rise of affordable homes, cars and the nuclear family ideal, this way of living slowly faded from the American mainstream.   Now rising costs are bringing multigenerational homes back. A spot in an assisted living facility now runs about $71K a year, and the average U.S. family can’t afford 75% of homes on the market.   For a growing number of Americans, moving back in together is a practical choice, and for some, it’s a financial necessity. Younger generations split their costs while older adults gain care, company and stability.  Let’s explore the advantages (and a few barriers) to intergenerational living.   Why Are Americans Reconsidering Intergenerational Living?  The top reason is simple: cost.   From housing to healthcare, prices keep climbing, and some older adults have little or no retirement savings. That financial pressure shows up in the numbers. About 40% of older U.S

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