News

Kennedy Jr. swam in a creek in Washington, D.C., that has been deemed unsafe due to its high levels of bacteria Kennedy, the ...
The NPS explicitly prohibits swimming and wading in Rock Creek, citing health risks from elevated E. coli and other pathogens ...
Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. took a swim in Washington, D.C.’s Rock Creek despite warnings about high bacterial ...
The freshman senator made the announcement at a “SICK OF IT” event outside the National Institutes of Health headquarters in ...
Senators sent a letter to Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. warning him that cuts to the agency could ...
19 Democratic state attorneys general are filing a federal lawsuit challenging the Trump Administration's efforts to overhaul ...
RFK Jr. is seen completely submerged in the Rock Creek’s fecal bacteria polluted waters in a Mother’s Day photograph shared by the HHS secretary.
Calley Means addressed many of the sometimes controversial health-care issues associated with RFK Jr. during a nearly 90-minute discussion.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' website said David Geier was hired as a "senior data analyst." ...
Swimming has been illegal in most of D.C.’s waterways since the 1970s, largely because of contamination from the district’s ...
The FDA has granted approval to three natural food colorings derived from algae and flowers, providing food manufacturers with alternatives after recent artificial dye restrictions.
The selection of Rich Danker comes after HHS' first assistant secretary for public affairs abruptly quit days into his tenure.