Eileen Yam and Giancarlo Pasquini contributed to this chapter. Five years after the pandemic began, Americans largely see ...
Nearly three-quarters of U.S. adults (72%) say the COVID-19 pandemic did more to drive the country apart than to bring it ...
A new study analyzing long COVID health care utilization in Colorado reveals a significant shift from acute care to ...
As Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s Senate confirmation hearing took place on Wednesday, an Akron Press Club panel spoke on Trump's ...
On the fifth anniversary of the U.S. declaring a public health emergency over COVID-19, people continue to lose their lives.
It's been five months since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Public health experts explain where we are now.
In the years 1880 to 1920, we literally transformed the health environment,” says David Rosner, a professor of history and ...
It has been just over two weeks since President Trump took office, and there have been significant effects already on public ...
During the first years of the COVID pandemic, elevated precautions mostly suppressed the perennial flu outbreaks that ...
Public health experts say they are worried about access to important federal health data after agencies removed information ...
THURSDAY, Jan. 30, 2025 (HealthDay News) -- People still see COVID-19 as an ongoing public health threat, even though the pandemic officially ended in 2023, according to a new HealthDay/Harris Poll.
Productivity in Britain's public sector recorded a year-on-year decline in the three months to the end of September 2024, as ...