Parts of the Cape Fear River near Fayetteville, N.C., are contaminated with a PFAS compound called GenX. The North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services is surveying residents in the area about their health. Mark Wilson/Getty Images hide caption
epidemiology
Monday
Thursday
Smog fills Utah's Salt Lake Valley in January 2017. Winter weather in the area often traps air pollution that is bad for public health. George Frey/Getty Images hide caption
EPA Science Panel Considering Guidelines That Upend Basic Air Pollution Science
Saturday
Montana Wildfires Provide A Wealth Of Data On Health Effects Of Smoke Exposure
Montana Public Radio
Montana Wildfires Provide A Wealth Of Data On Health Effects Of Smoke Exposure
Sunday
A needle exchange program at the Austin Community Outreach Center in Austin, Ind., is aimed at stopping spread of HIV. Darron Cummings/AP hide caption
Tuesday
In 1962, a local leader in the Eastern Highlands of Papua New Guinea asks Fore men to stop the sorcery that he believes is killing women and children. Courtesy Shirley Lindenbaum hide caption
Friday
Mosquitoes hover around South Korea's bronze medalist Ki Bo Bae during the medal ceremony for archery, held on Aug. 11 at the Rio Games. Jewel Samad/AFP/Getty Images hide caption
Friday
Tuesday
Secretary of State John Kerry and African Union Commission Chairperson Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma signed an agreement Monday to establish the first Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Africa. The U.S. will provide technical advice and a few staff for the agency. Alex Wong/Getty Images hide caption
Tuesday
A hand-drawn map on the wall of a rural clinic shows health workers where a woman with Ebola may be hiding. Kelly McEvers/NPR hide caption
As Ebola Pingpongs In Liberia, Cases Disappear Into The Jungle
Tuesday
Hotspots show where the common cold is popping up across the U.S. via Sickweather hide caption
Friday
Children play in the West Point neighborhood of Monrovia last week. West Point has been hit hard by Ebola. So local leaders formed their own Ebola task force, which goes door to door looking for cases. John Moore/Getty Images hide caption
How Liberia Is Starting To Beat Ebola, With Fingers Crossed
Monday
A woman on the L train in New York City last week covers her face, fearful because a doctor with Ebola rode the train days earlier. Epidemiologists say people on the subway were not at risk. Stephen Nessen/WNYC hide caption
New York's Disease Detectives Hit The Street In Search Of Ebola
Thursday
Friday
A security man takes visitors' temperatures Wednesday at the Transcorp Hilton hotel in Abuja, Nigeria, about 400 miles north of Port Harcourt. Afolabi Sotunde/Reuters/Landov hide caption
Thursday
Kenyan health officials take the temperatures of passengers arriving at the Nairobi airport on Thursday. Kenya has no reported cases of Ebola, but it's a transportation hub and so is on alert. Simon Maina/AFP/Getty Images hide caption