LONDON — With so many lives affected by cancer — in the United States alone, about 40 percent will receive a cancer diagnosis during their
Category: Fashion
The Anti-Vaccine Movement’s New Frontier
One chilly afternoon this past January, Kennedy took the microphone in front of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, before a crowd of maybe a few
1 in 5 Adult Covid Survivors in the U.S. May Develop Long Covid, Says CDC
People in both groups who had a history of one of the 26 health conditions in the previous year were excluded from the study —
US Begins Inquiry Into Industry’s Role in Infant Formula Supply Shortages
A severe shortage of baby formula has prompted the Federal Trade Commission to begin an inquiry into the industry’s consolidation and whether online resellers have
Baby Formula Shortage Reveals Gaps in Regulation and Reporting
Riley San Miguel said her son, Kru, was barely a month old when he started crying all the time, not wanting to eat. When he
U.S. Birthrate Ticks Up 1 Percent, Halting a Steady Decline
The birthrate in the United States increased slightly last year, ending what had been a consistent decline since 2014, the federal government reported on Tuesday.
The Mental Cost of Being Denied an Abortion
“Grief and a feeling of not being fully informed is consistent throughout my clients who report having had an abortion,” Robin Atkins, a licensed mental
As Monkeypox Cases Rise, Nations Are Urged to Examine Vaccine Stores
After the Sept. 11 attacks, the United States considered immunizing the entire population to protect against a terrorist attack using smallpox. “In the end, it
After Fetterman’s Stroke, Doctors Look at Senate Campaign Prospects
What really is the prognosis for John Fetterman, the Democratic Senate nominee from Pennsylvania who had a stroke on May 13? The 52-year-old lieutenant governor
Kristine Gebbie, the First U.S. AIDS Czar, Dies at 78
Kristine Gebbie, a health policy expert who served as the nation’s first AIDS czar in the early 1990s, died on May 17 in Adelaide, Australia.