Dr. Marc J. Kahn In The News

K.L.A.S. T.V. 8 News Now
It’s easy to see Las Vegas is bouncing back, but many are concerned as COVID-19 cases start to climb for the first time in recent weeks.
Las Vegas Sun
The timeline of the pandemic provides numerous examples of the consequences of the separation of public health, that being the care of populations, and clinical medicine, that being the care of individual patients.
GlobeNewswire
We congratulate Dr. Marc Kahn, Dean of the Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV), for receiving the Medical Professional of the Year Award from the same institution.
WorldHealth.net
Humans may be able to live for between 120 and 150 years, but no longer than this "absolute limit" on human life span, a new study suggests.
Mysterious Universe
According to an interesting new study, the human body may be able to repair itself for as long as 120 to 150 years but that’s the limit.
Syfy Wire
Unless your name's Vlad Dracula, you've somehow discovered the Holy Grail, or you recently stumbled upon the fabled Fountain of Youth, any ideas of living forever will most likely remain a fanciful delusion as a new research paper has put a cap on human longevity at 150 as an extreme limit.
Kompas.com
A new study shows that humans may be able to live to the age of 120 to 150 years. The human life span, according to the study, cannot be more than this 'absolute limit.'
LiveScience
Humans may be able to live for between 120 and 150 years, but no longer than this "absolute limit" on human life span, a new study suggests.