-
Ohio’s Mobile Response & Stabilization Services, which provide mental, emotional, and behavioral health care to kids in crisis, are being expanded.
-
Workers who track data on car crashes, drownings, traumatic brain injury, falls in the elderly, and other perils lost their jobs. Advocates worry life-saving work will stop.
-
The 2023 Ohio Abortion report shows an increase of 3,512 or 19% over 2022.
-
It appears the Steward-owned Warren hospitals will stay open as two out-of-state health groups emerge as possible buyers, leaving residents uncertain about their future.
-
Life is stressful. Whether it’s work or relationship issues or you’re worrying about politics or global conflict, it can be overwhelming. NPR’s Stress Less: A quest to reclaim your calm aims to help.
-
Babies under six months can't be vaccinated directly against COVID. A new study found that most infants hospitalized for COVID had mothers who didn’t get the vaccine while they were pregnant.
-
More Americans now use pot on a daily basis than alcohol. A sweeping new report says the federal government needs to better understand the risks to the public and get involved.
-
The OneOhio Recovery Foundation is charged with distributing 55% of the state’s opioid settlement funds. But some families and harm reduction groups are concerned the board lacks racial diversity.
-
Nursing aides feel abandoned as they grapple with mental and physical troubles that stem from their work during the COVID outbreak.
-
The Cleveland Department of Public Health is offering a free seven-week smoking cessation program to address what officials say is one of the greatest public health threats facing the city.
-
Joseph Raines said his discovery of art was a form of divine intervention that saved his life and gave him the ability to make a difference in others' lives.
-
Studies suggest postpartum depression affects between 13 and 20% of new moms, but many don’t get the mental health care they need. New research aims to reduce barriers to postpartum care in rural Ohio.