News

A drug called lenacapavir, administered in two injections a year, offers protection from HIV comparable to daily pills. One ...
At issue was a Tenneessee law that bars minors from accessing gender-affirming care as they transition genders.
AIDS orphans and vulnerable children are without support since the U.S. cut foreign assistance. A pastor has been frantically trying to find meds for an HIV-positive orphan who can no longer get them.
The study, published in JAMA, followed teens for years and evaluated addictive behaviors, as well as suicidality.
New pictures of coins from a 300-year-old shipwreck off the coast of Colombia help tell the story of the ship's journey.
The two Koreas have engaged in psychological warfare since the 1960s, with weapons like huge billboard screens, loudspeakers installed along the border, and airdropping propaganda leaflets.
President Trump is the first U.S. president in 116 years that the NAACP hasn't invited to the annual convention. The group ...
The Federal Reserve is expected to hold interest rates steady Wednesday. Members of the central bank's rate-setting committee will telegraph their plans for possible rate cuts later this year.
Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu says Iran is "marching very quickly" toward a nuclear weapon. The U.S. intelligence community says Iran suspended its nuclear weapons program decades ago. Who's right?
The new books publishing this week may get quite heavy, laden as they are with family tragedy, psychopathy and heartbreak — ...
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with journalist and author Sara Kehaulani Goo about her new book "Kuleana: A Story of Family, Land, and Legacy in Old Hawai'i." ...
Inflation has fallen slightly but prices at the grocery store are still higher than they were before the pandemic. Along the U.S. southern border, some families find savings by shopping in Mexico.