USC employs hundreds of “standardized patients,” trained actors who help medical students diagnose disorders during exams. Since the pandemic hit, their duties have changed dramatically.
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When one of his patients developed a life-threatening amount of necrotic tissue, the co-director of Keck Medicine of USC’s limb salvage program turned to “nature’s microsurgeons.”
Jasmine Sears plans to use her degree in environmental studies to help the fashion industry do more to protect the planet.
USC Dornsife’s Josh Seim put in nearly two years behind the wheel of an ambulance to better understand medics’ role in managing urban suffering.
Why cellphone videos of black peoples deaths should be considered sacred, like lynching photographs
A USC Annenberg scholar explains why these easily accessed images should viewed with solemn reserve — and careful circulation.
USC Annenberg’s Dan Birman directed the documentary that led to Cyntoia Brown walking out of prison after serving 15 years of a life sentence for murder.
Democrats balk as Republicans demand legal protections for businesses, but a USC political scientist and a collegue think shielding businesses from COVID-related lawsuits might make sense.
A $30 million grant propels a USC-led initiative to pioneer research into regenerating face and skull tissue.
Staff scan centuries-old gilded pages and send them to eager faculty and students from behind closed doors at USC Libraries.