-
The judge's decision vacated a rule imposed by the Biden administration earlier this year to keep medical debt from affecting credit scores.
-
Ibogaine, a naturally occurring psychoactive drug that is illegal in the U.S., is being used abroad to treat addiction, PTSD, depression, and traumatic brain injuries.
-
Texas lawmakers advanced a bill to change the language in the state's abortion laws in an effort to clarify when doctors are allowed to perform an abortion during a medical emergency. The bill, which passed unanimously in the Texas Senate on Tuesday, is the first time Republican lawmakers have sought to amend the state's ban since Roe v. Wade was overturned in 2022.
-
Since Tuesday, Texas saw at least 59 new cases.
-
The bill comes after an NBC investigation found that the UNT Health Science Center at Fort Worth obtained hundreds of unclaimed bodies for medical research without explicit consent.
-
The Supreme Court decided Monday that a court order finding Texas hospitals cannot federally be required to provide pregnancy terminations when they violate a state abortion ban will stay for now. Texas had asked the justices to leave the order in place while the Biden administration had asked the justices to throw out the lower court order.
-
Baylor Scott & White is renaming a nursing scholarship in the late congresswoman's honor and has contributed to a new nonprofit that will further the causes she championed in office.
-
The medical center said Dr. J. Steve Bynon had admitted to changing patient records.
-
Naloxone could soon be available at festivals in Denton if a majority of City Council members agree to partner with a nonprofit during their next meeting in February.
-
鈥淲e care. You are special. We value you.鈥 These are words that people who experience homelessness don鈥檛 hear often enough, Alva Santos, the chief operations officer at Our Daily Bread, Together with Monsignor King Outreach Center, said in a news release from Texas Health Resources.
-
CEO Bob Walker talks with 四虎影院's Justin Martin about how Scottish Rite for Children has grown from 1921 to today.
-
The possibility that the vaccine won鈥檛 work 鈥 or that, as some worry, it could even hurt them 鈥 is a devastating blow after a year of sacrifice, isolation and waiting for protection against the virus.