-
The Energy Department finalized rules that will ban fossil fuels in new and remodeled federal buildings by 2030.
-
Idaho's biggest hospital system says the number of people needing flights out of Idaho for emergency abortions is up sharply since the state's abortion ban took effect.
-
Although federal health officials say the risk to the public remains low, traces of bird flu have been found in pasteurized milk on store shelves.
-
After studying various species earlier this month, some scientists now say they understand the origin of animal behavior during solar eclipses.
-
Fifteen years after the EPA said greenhouse gasses are a danger to public health, the agency finalized rules to limit climate-warming pollution from existing coal and new gas power plants.
-
Federal officials and scientific experts say the virus detected in retail milk samples may be inactive and unable to cause an infection.
-
A research lab in Flagstaff, Ariz., is trying to leverage a 1970s discovery into a safe and desirable alternative for men who want to prevent pregnancy.
-
At issue is a clash between federal and state law about how pregnant women must be treated in the emergency room.
-
Researchers have been able to reverse the effects of a syndrome that affects brain development in a brain organoid.
-
The Supreme Court appeared sharply divided over its latest abortion case, which looks at whether a state may ban medical termination of a pregnancy if the woman's health, but not life, is in danger.
-
Surgeons transplanted a kidney and thymus gland from a gene-edited pig into a 54-year-old woman in an attempt to extend her life. It's the latest experimental use of animal organs in humans.
-
Over the past few decades, psychologists have begun to understand how parents across many cultures teach their children to build deep, fulfilling relationships with their siblings.