Five years after becoming Nevada’s first diagnosed COVID-19 patient, Ronald Pipkins reflects on the lasting division the ...
Five years ago this month, COVID-19 changed the world. The first pandemic in a century altered how Americans saw themselves, ...
The shift comes after the governor's office told agency officials that lawmakers are examining remote-work policies while ...
On the Border, a Tex-Mex chain owned by Argonne Capital Group, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection as it struggles to ...
Measles is rarely seen in the United States, but Americans are growing more concerned about the preventable virus as cases continue to rise. The virus is airborne and spreads easily when an infected ...
Bill to make ivermectin available OTC without a prescription advances in state Legislature. Supporters claim it might cure ...
This week, the Tennessee House Public Service Subcommittee conducted a hearing on House Bill 132, legislation that reforms ...
Texas health officials say they are seeing some severe cases with about 20 hospitalizations, some of those patients receiving ...
COVID-19 changed how people viewed illness but also revealed the depths of mistrust in medicine, masking and vaccines.
Measles is a disease that should be a relic of the past with vaccination. But now a child is dead from a disease that is entirely preventable.
Two elected officials who helped with masking rules and vaccination, and a former school board member, tell us their thoughts.