The overhaul of higher education in Texas has taken an emotional toll for some professors. They are leaving the profession or fleeing the state, and heading for roles where they say they no ...
THIS column gives way to the abridged version of a featured article in the Philippine Journal of Nursing in 2025 written by a luminary in public health, educator from the University of the Philippines ...
Over the past half century, terms describing positive trajectories of ageing have proliferated across gerontology, psychology, sociology and medicine. In ...
The president of the Tennessee Medical Association argues that newly proposed legislation will improve healthcare transparency and curb costs.
Given that the United States spends more on health care than any nation in the world — around $5 trillion annually — Dr. Georges Benjamin asked a simple question to a room of journalists earlier this ...
Jeremy O. Harris drunkenly approached OpenAI CEO Sam Altman at the Oscars after party and called him a Nazi…in front of Zendaya.
ASPPH is pleased to welcome Dr. Kurt M. Ribisl as the new Dean of the Indiana University School of Public Health–Bloomington. A nationally recognized leader in tobacco control, public health ...
ASPPH is excited to announce a new strategic partnership with the National Health IT Collaborative for the Underserved (NHIT) aimed at expanding opportunities for public health students and strengthen ...
Early lessons learned from California’s Equity and Practice Transformation program can provide a roadmap for other large-scale health improvement work, including states’ efforts to implement the Rural ...
Mississippi State’s David Buys is being recognized by the University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Public Health with this year’s Alumni Award for Practice. Buys is MSU’s associate vice provost ...
Jobs for medical and health services managers are projected to grow 23 percent through 2034. The region's next competitive advantage is the quality of people leading health care organizations, and ...
A state survey of more than 11,000 Massachusetts residents found widespread misunderstanding about the mental health risks tied to regular marijuana use, including links to psychosis and schizophrenia ...
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