News

Childhood trauma is costing Kentucky millions each year, according to anew report released today by Kentucky Youth Advocates ...
A new study shows that music therapy is as effective as cognitive behavioral therapy at helping cancer patients and survivors ...
In defending Trump's signature spending bill—which could cut millions from the Medicaid rolls over the next decade—Kentucky ...
As concurrent demonstrations took place nationwide, Somerset residents gathered around the Public Square Fountain. Protestors ...
At least ten people were killed in Israel overnight, after multiple Iranian missiles evaded the country's advanced defense ...
Former FDA chief Dr. David Kessler says the new weight-loss drugs are a powerful tool to fight obesity. But they come with ...
A tiny mountain town in northern New York is the beneficiary of a huge bequest. Now the 600 residents of Long Lake have to figure out what to do with it.
Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. fired all the people serving on a national vaccine advisory board. NPR's Ayesha Rascoe speaks to Edwin Asturias, one of the doctors who was sacked.
NPR's Ayesha Rascoe asks the International Crisis Group's Ali Vaez about the current state of negotiations over Iran's nuclear program.
Saturday's military parade in Washington D.C. and the national "No Kings" protests created a split-screen moment for a divided nation.
One of Khartoums oldest and most loved hotels has survived coups, wars, and even a bomb attack, but it couldn't weather Sudan's civil war.
Climate change in the U.S. is intersecting with another crisis: the lack of affordable housing. Vienna, Austria, may offer solutions.