Outlook in 2016

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  • Remarkable progress in sequencing technologies and data handling is making personalized genome analysis an increasingly common feature of health care.

    • Andrew R. Scott
    Outlook
  • It may not be possible to protect the identity of genomic data. But how much of a problem is that?

    • Neil Savage
    Outlook
  • The US Precision Medicine Initiative (PMI) aims to gather health data on at least one million volunteers. Kathy Hudson, deputy director for science, outreach and policy at the US National Institutes of Health (NIH), led its creation, and spoke to Nature about the challenges she faced.

    • Eric Bender
    Outlook
  • When data-gathering precision-medicine projects build trust with their users, patients and researchers both benefit.

    • Katherine Bourzac
    Outlook
  • After a series of setbacks, genetic therapies are finally moving beyond small academic trials towards approval as treatments.

    • Eric Bender
    Outlook
  • More money than ever is being invested in research and development. Countries that previously spent little are now pumping money into science to secure their future economic growth. By Alla Katsnelson, infographic by Alisdair Macdonald.

    • Alla Katsnelson
    Outlook
  • Singapore has made impressive progress towards putting science at the centre of its economy — but can it afford to continue on its trajectory?

    • Annabel McGilvray
    Outlook
  • Fostering the connection between science funding and economic growth needs to be based on thoughtful measurement, says Julia Lane.

    • Julia Lane
    Outlook
  • A decade of economic growth has not led to a renaissance of Russian research.

    • Olga Dobrovidova
    Outlook
  • Chinese researchers are benefiting as the government looks to science to lead the economic transition to become a world-leader in the production of high-value technology.

    • Annabel McGilvray
    Outlook
  • The Boston region has become a hotbed for life-science jobs, thanks to a constant push to meld research and industry.

    • Neil Savage
    Outlook
  • Germany's Excellence Initiative was highly debated. With its successor approved, scientists are asking whether equality and scientific freedom can be preserved in a world of competition.

    • Anja Krieger
    Outlook
  • Australian politicians are embracing innovation as the wellspring for future wealth, but will it come at the expense of basic and fundamental research?

    • Bianca Nogrady
    Outlook
    • Michelle Grayson
    Outlook
  • We can't live without it, but many of us struggle to live with it. Pain has an essential biological function, but too much — or the wrong sort — ruins lives and puts a sizeable dent in economic productivity. By David Holmes, infographic by Mohamed Ashour.

    • David Holmes
    Outlook
  • The 'war on drugs' has left many in developing nations with no access to strong painkillers. But governments in these countries are learning to stop worrying and love the poppy.

    • Lucas Laursen
    Outlook