Grand Thoughts: Treatment for breast cancer guided by angels on Earth
Life has its twists and turns, ups and downs, good and bad. In the last three months, I've experienced it all.
Life has its twists and turns, ups and downs, good and bad. In the last three months, I've experienced it all.
The U.S. flu season appears to be over. It was long, but it wasn't unusually severe.
In the small Appalachian city of Bristol, Virginia, City Council member Neal Osborne left a meeting on the morning of Jan. 3 and rushed himself to the hospital.
Allergy season is here — and it's earlier and stronger than expected.
The Georgia Senate on Thursday passed a plan to loosen health care permitting that proponents say will create new options for patients, as Democrats made a las…
A blood test for colon cancer performed well in a study published Wednesday, offering a new kind of screening for a leading cause of cancer deaths.
Amid a nationwide mental health crisis and calls for increased gun control, some Tennessee lawmakers want to bolster the state's ability to mandate psychiatric…
Former talk show host Wendy Williams has been diagnosed with the same form of dementia that actor Bruce Willis has, a statement released Thursday on behalf of …
Additional in vitro fertilization providers in Alabama paused services Thursday, sending patients scrambling to make other plans in the wake of a state Supreme…
WASHINGTON (AP) — Alzheimer's quietly ravages the brain long before symptoms appear and now scientists have new clues about the dominolike sequence of those ch…
Emily Hollenbeck lived with a deep, recurring depression she likened to a black hole, where gravity felt so strong and her limbs so heavy she could barely move…
The Alabama Supreme Court has ruled that frozen embryos can be considered children under state law, a decision critics said could have sweeping implications fo…
For more than two decades, the number of newborns legally surrendered by their mothers each year under Tennessee's no-questions-asked safe haven law has remain…
Smoking has surpassed injecting as the most common way of taking drugs in U.S. overdose deaths, a new government study suggests.
Officials in central Oregon this week reported a case of bubonic plague in a resident who likely got the disease from a sick pet cat.