HERSHEY, Pa. — For parents, few words are more earth-shattering than when a pediatrician says the phrase “heart defects.”
HERSHEY, Pa. — For parents, few words are more earth-shattering than when a pediatrician says the phrase “heart defects.”
HERSHEY, Pa. — Although an estimated one in every 500 people is living with an inherited disease known as hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), many of them may experience few or no
DUBOIS, Pa. — Substance use disorder affects thousands of people in Pennsylvania including some of our tiniest residents — newborns.
HERSHEY, Pa. — Many symptoms of head and neck cancer are hard to miss — a lump in the neck, persistent hoarseness, a mouth sore that doesn’t heal — which
HERSHEY, Pa. — When a patient needs a blood transfusion, they often don’t have time to consider the source. During emergencies, they just want it to be safe and available.
When a vehicle heats up, every minute counts.
HERSHEY, Pa. — Among codependent relationships, few cause as much damage as the connection between American posteriors and the chairs on which they sit.
HARRISBURG, Pa. – The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) has declared a statewide Code Orange Air Quality Action Day for fine particulate matter in Pennsylvania on Monday, July 17.
HERSHEY, Pa. — Although the term was first coined 67 years ago, artificial intelligence has dominated headlines in recent months.
DUBOIS, Pa. — Penn Highlands Healthcare recognized their fourth class of graduates from the Graduate Medical Education program at a ceremony on Friday, June 30.
HERSHEY, Pa. — Your eyesight is just fine, so why bother with seeing an eye doctor – Right?
HERSHEY, Pa. — The annual tradition of pops, bangs, and light shows that celebrate the July 4 holiday often results in an altogether different holiday tradition nobody wants — fireworks-related
HERSHEY, Pa. — Sticky. Muggy. Oppressive. They’re words you hear often in Pennsylvania and the rest of the country as the summer weeks roll by.
HERSHEY, Pa. — Dr. David Ingram’s young children love to play outdoors, so he’s become the tick police, vigilantly checking for any parasitic arthropod crawling on them.
HERSHEY, Pa. — The old advertising slogan “You’ve come a long way baby” could be used to describe the advances the medical community has made in reducing the social stigma