Study shows young adults with autism struggle with isolation
Tossing a high school graduation cap into the air typically signals the launch of a bigger life. But a new study shows that's often not the case for young people with autism.
Tossing a high school graduation cap into the air typically signals the launch of a bigger life. But a new study shows that's often not the case for young people with autism.
The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled against a company that had patents on genes linked to higher risks for breast and ovarian cancers. The ruling is disliked by a biotechnology industry group, but is praised by university researchers.
Health equity continues to elude Missouri's African Americans and Hispanics on a range of medical issues, some beginning before birth, according to new studies released this week by the Missouri Foundation for Health.
The familiar site of dogs sporting rainbow bandanas will be missing from this summer’s St. Louis PrideFest. A new policy banning all but service animals from the June 29-30 event has pet parents squaring off.
Missouri House Speaker Tim Jones contends that Gov. Jay Nixon’s objection to the tax-cut measure on his desk is “a red herring” that the governor is using to make his expected veto more palatable. Nixon is highlighting the bill's removal of a longstanding sales tax exemption on prescription drugs.
A new study by researchers at Washington University and several other major institutions have found that germ-killing soap and antibiotic ointment can reduce health-care acquired infections by up to 44 percent.
The St. Louis area Gateway to Better Health program was supposed to end following Medicaid expansion. Because state lawmakers rejected expansion, backers will seek a federal waiver to preserve Gateway.
Kendra Copanas, executive director of the Maternal Child and Family Health Coalition talks about infant mortality in St. Louis and St. Louis County, including racial disparities, education disparities and tips for all expectant mothers.
Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon has sent a letter today to like-minded groups that support the expansion of the state’s Medicaid program, saying that he plans to continue efforts “to bring the dollars Missourians send to Washington back to strengthen Medicaid in Missouri…” The Republican-led General Assembly rejected the idea during the legislative session that ended Friday. And the state's two top officials who oversee Medicaid have announced they're stepping down.
Five months after taking the post, Missouri Department of Social Services Director Alan Freeman is resigning to return to his old job in St. Louis as president and chief executive officer of Grace Hill Health Centers Inc. Gov. Jay Nixon announced Freeman’s departure today, which comes just a week after the governor’s announcement, without details, that Ian McCaslin was being replaced as director of the department's Medicaid division.