The American Public Health Association has recognized two Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health faculty for their ...
Small proof-of-principle study using samples from Baltimore sidewalks suggests fungi developing heat tolerance in city ...
Speaker: Valerie K. Sullivan, PhD, MHS, RDN, Assistant Scientist, BSPH Title: "Serum and urine metabolite correlates of vitamin D supplementation in the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) ...
More than 800,000 lives have been lost to firearms in the United States since the start of the 21st century. It is an ongoing public health crisis that affects individuals, families, and communities ...
Although great progress continues to be made, the burden of pneumonia and diarrhea continues to be deeply inequitable, with over 70% of under-five mortality concentrated in just 15 countries. The 2024 ...
Led by Allison Foster, NBPHE President; and Dr. Cerina Dubois, JHU Post-doc Fellow in the Department of Mental Health Hosted by the National Public Health Board of Examiners in partnership with the ...
In 2024, the Center for Mental Health and Addiction Policy received a 3-year Bloomberg American Health Initiative award to carry out innovative research projects aimed at reducing suicide. The award ...
The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, also known as food stamps, is the United States’ largest anti-hunger program and helps an average of 41.7 million Americans per month.
Some wellness influencers warn against consuming seed oils, blaming them for a range of health problems and characterizing them as toxic. Scientific studies consistently show otherwise. “There is ...
Receiving a diagnosis of a chronic illness can be life-altering. Along with the day-to-day physical symptoms of the illness, emotions such as sadness, grief, and denial, as well as an added financial ...
In September 2021, Texas passed Senate Bill 8, or SB8, which banned abortions as early as five weeks after the start of a patient’s last menstrual cycle. The measure effectively banned abortion in the ...
At the end of March, the KP.2 variant was causing about 4% of infections in the U.S., according to the CDC, while its parental strain, JN.1, was causing over 50% of infections at that time. As of ...
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