A trove of information from health care claims in Georgia sheds light on everything from rural access gaps to pediatric mental health trends.
I'm a nurse and a teacher in New York City schools. Every day I’m reminded that nearly everything that matters to students is secretly (or not so secretly) health-related.
Marco Rubio praises the ‘America First’ agreement as a new approach. How old challenges play out will be the test.
A CDC advisory committee is considering limiting access to the hepatitis B vaccine, which has been recommended for newborns since 1991.
Atlanta is still seeing high HIV infection rates, but some new research shows promise.
A physician with JASA, which serves older adults in New York, learns the power of patience and persistence - and of asking the right questions.
With large donor countries – especially the U.S. – pulling back, a global development think tank has a new idea for funding programs that fight AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria.
This is the first known human case of bird flu since February, but mild cases may have gone undetected because testing ground to a halt throughout much of the year.
A little-known federal-state partnership has screened tens of thousands of low-income women for cancer in Georgia, offering a reminder of how basic public health programs can save lives.
The heart of the guidance is not a list of shiny new, expensive programs. Instead, it is a dramatically unsexy push to make health systems more flexible and more anticipatory.
Canada lost its measles-free status this week, and the U.S. may be next. Daniel Salas explains the art and science of making that determination.
After firings, furloughs, and a shooting shook the CDC community, local groups, former employees, and nonprofits have stepped up — offering everything from free counseling to sandwich drives.