This means more life for these women, and more wisdom from them about howto survive a cancer diagnosis. (Smith, for example, travels the country talking to women about breast cancer as a paid spokeswoman for drug company Eli Lilly).
Imagine how much more reluctant families will be to accept a diagnosis now if there is a link in their minds with being a potential mass murderer -- even when there is no evidence whatsoever this is the case.
And to a non-obvious one: How should we act towards someone denying a cancer-diagnosis and should we treat someone denying anthropogenic climate change any differently?
We will now be able to discover and share diagnosis faster than we ever have before and this will have a tremendous impact on how teaching can be done as well as how researchers and clinicians can share and discuss microscopy images.