On the fifth anniversary of the U.S. declaring a public health emergency over COVID-19, people continue to lose their lives.
Thankfully, COVID-19 is not the public health threat it was in 2020. Still, much changed in our lives then, and some of that change was permanent.
"Such a lawsuit is nothing short of frivolous litigation that defies the basic theory of the law and sovereign equality," Chinese embassy spokesperson Liu Pengyu told Newsweek when asked how China ...
United States will be losing access to the WHO database of changing influenza strains resulting in less effective flu ...
U.S. federal budgeting has two major categories of spending. The one subject to the most scrutiny is “discretionary” spending, which is the basis of the annual appropriations process. This includes ...
Milwaukee-based staffing company ManpowerGroup observes optimism about the U.S. job market in 2025. The business reported ...
Public health experts evaluate the global and financial impact of the U.S. leaving the World Health Organization.
One of the first executive orders signed by President Trump on the evening of his inauguration was to immediately withdraw ...
Preliminary unemployment numbers for the entire state of Kentucky increased in December of 2024 compared to just one year ...
In a video interview, the director of the Pandemic Center at Brown’s School of Public Health explains why another pandemic is on the horizon — and why that needn’t induce panic.
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (WLNE) — Today marks five years since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic in the US. January 31, 2020 is when the US government officially declared a public health emergency for the ...
Early adult death in the US has significantly increased since 2010, with mortality rates exceeding prepandemic levels, even ...