The Power of Therapy
From domestic abusers to former child soldiers, there is increasing evidence that behavioral therapy can turn them around.
From domestic abusers to former child soldiers, there is increasing evidence that behavioral therapy can turn them around.
The National Science Foundation is investing in a data project to make Chicago a “smarter,” fitter city.
Scientists at the Field Museum got a chance to solve residents’ questions about bones, rocks, and more.
Before the bill was signed, some families would give up custody of their child to the Department of Children and Family Services. It was the only way, those families said, to get their child the needed help.
Deep inside a rocky chamber, reached by a narrow crevice, researchers found more than 1,500 fossilized bones of what may be the gravesite of a creature never before identified by science.
Business and labor community oppose tax, but health advocates say it could raise money while improving health.
When shooting and killing an endangered species might be the best way to save it. This episode contains strong language.
In 2011 the city set health targets and promised timely updates on them. But four years later we don’t really know where we stand on important health measures.
The Illinois Public Health Department reports the death toll from a Legionnaires’ outbreak in Quincy, IL has risen to eight. Forty-one others have been diagnosed with this deadly pneumonia, carried by steam and mist.
In Britain, there is a growing demand for sperm donors. So the government came up with a solution: Set up a national sperm bank. Problem is, the bank is almost empty.