Alleged gunman in UnitedHealthcare CEO shooting posted about ‘devastating’ back condition online
Day: December 11, 2024
The Franklin Fire has forced thousands of people to evacuate the Malibu area, including celebrities Cher and Dick Van Dyke. Follow Newsweek’s live blog.
The federal Food & Drug Administration has approved two new Alzheimer’s medications that can offer people more time to live normally, but accessing them in Florida is complicated. Hold-ups related to insurance coverage, diagnostic test requirements, eligibility exclusions, and long waits for neurologist appointments can become stumbling blocks for whether and how quickly someone can get the …
A woman unable to work because of illness came to Grace Ministries, seeking help with paying her rent this year.
Corporations are scrambling to protect their senior executives. Boards are reassessing security budgets. And CEOs are being told to delete their digital footprints.
Real time maps from California Fire Department show how the blaze has spread to over 3,000 acres of land – an area twice the size of Central Park
The New Republic has practiced a confrontational, sometimes combative, style of criticism since its early issues—its clarion call Rebecca West’s essay on “The Duty of Harsh Criticism.” Our reviewers tend to be more interested in vigorous discussion of a book and its ideas than in handing out gold stars. This end-of-year “best of” list reflects those tendencies. This far from exhaustive list features 10 books that fueled surprising and worthwhile…
President Yoon Suk Yeol remains in office despite the [robe and a bid to impeach him, raising questions about who’s in charge of the key U.S. ally.
The National Weather Service in Los Angeles warned Tuesday night there remained a “very extreme fire danger” across southern California.
Women at age 30 can start collecting their own vaginal sample for cervical cancer screening at a physician’s office and forego pelvic exams, a federal health advisory committee said on Tuesday. Why it matters: The draft guidance from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force marks the first time self-collection for human papillomavirus has been recommended, and it’s expected to increase screening rates. Recommendations from the task force not only…