In the first issue of 2025, the North Carolina Medical Journal looks at navigating disaster relief, including coverage on Hurricane Helene and the many collaborations aiding in the recovery of…
This issue of the North Carolina Medical Journal argues that the goal of improving health compels us to address heart, mind, body, and our teeth and gums.
This issue outlines how our state is managing funds from opioid settlements through collaborative partnerships between policymakers, public health, health care providers, and communities.
This issue of the North Carolina Medical Journal offers the reader a step-by-step journey into artificial intelligence as a tool to improve the outputs and outcomes of clinical practice. While the predictions and promise are grand, limitations, cautions, and guardrails are also described.
Articles in this issue provide an update on what has occurred across North Carolina related to team-based care since this journal last covered it in 2018, highlighting innovations and infrastructure that address health equity, population-based care, reducing costs, and increasing quality.
This issue of the journal lays out the ambitious plans to make it easier for people in our state to participate in caring for their own health. It is a primer, borrowing from other states that successfully expanded Medicaid, while also sharing innovative ways to ensure that health care is not only affordable but accessible, acceptable, accountable, and of the highest quality.
Significant advances in science and medicine have not been adequate to dethrone heart disease, cancer, and stroke from their positions as three of the top killers of North Carolinians.
This issue addresses the health of North Carolina’s Armed Services and Veteran populations and their families, including members of the Reserve Component.
This issue examines the challenges and opportunities facing North Carolina children and families, from food security to early childhood education.
This issue describes the potential for changes to lower the probability of firearm-related injuries and fatalities, not just for children and adolescents, but persons of all ages.
This issue of the North Carolina Medical Journal explores the role of trust and communications in the provision of health care and information.
This issue of the North Carolina Medical Journal questions what we know about aging and proposes—widely and wisely—that we think not just of aging, but of healthy aging.