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Health

Water quality expert Bob Bowcock tests a creek for cancer-causing PFAS “forever chemicals” at a property in Dalton, Ga., on June 12, 2025. Credit: Issam Ahmed/AFP via Getty Images

Former EPA Staff Detail Expanding Pollution Risks Under Trump

By Liza Gross

A child receives a standard immunization at a pediatric office on Sept. 15, 2025, in Coral Gables, Fla. Credit: Joe Raedle/Getty Images

States Sue to Block Trump’s ‘Anti-Science’ Vaccine Policy

By Liza Gross

An oil pumpjack operates in the background as a fast food worker takes orders at a drive-through on Feb. 9, 2023, in Signal Hill, Calif. Credit: Mario Tama/Getty Images

Unequal Access to Nature Fuels America’s Health Crisis

By Katie Surma

The sun rises over corn crops on a farm in Franklin, Va. Credit: Kristen Zeis/The Washington Post via Getty Images

Virginia House Delays Action on Bill Banning Paraquat

By Charles Paullin

New Jersey is home to over 30 species of amphibians, which can be affected by ranavirus. Credit: Ben Hasty/MediaNews Group/Reading Eagle via Getty Images

Climate Change Could Make This Horrific New Jersey Wildlife Disease Worse

By Alex Megerle

A hairdresser braids a client’s hair with synthetic hair extensions in Lusaka, Zambia, on Aug. 15, 2023. Credit: Lillian Banda/Xinhua via Getty Images

Toxic Beauty: Black Women Most at Risk From Harmful Chemicals in Unregulated Hair Products

By Liza Gross

A view of the Chevron Richmond Refinery in Contra Costa County, California. Credit: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Mapping Unequal Climate Risks in a Northern California County

By Liza Gross

Julissa Hernandez used to run track and field as a student at Niagara Falls High School before her asthma forced her to quit. She believes the poor air quality in in the New York town contributed to her complications. Credit: Jennifer Wybieracki

How Two Teens in Niagara Falls Are Confronting Pollution and a Mental Health Crisis

By Jennifer Wybieracki

Lead pipes are replaced at a home in Chicago on July 25, 2025. Credit: Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

States Say They Need More Help Replacing Lead Pipes. Congress May Cut the Funding Instead.

By Keerti Gopal

Amber DeLoney-Stewart’s 2-year-old daughter Valencia stands in front of their former home in East Trenton, N.J. Credit: Anna Mattson/Inside Climate News

One Family’s Battle With Trenton’s Lead Legacy

By Anna Mattson

A worker fries tofu over a furnace fueled by a combination of plastic waste, wood and coconut husks at a tofu factory on May 22, 2025, in Sidoarjo, Indonesia. Credit: Robertus Pudyanto/Getty Images

Burning Plastic Waste for Household Fuel Endangers Millions 

By Liza Gross

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. discusses new dietary guidelines during a news briefing at the White House on Wednesday in Washington, D.C. Credit: Alex Wong/Getty Images

Reversing Years of Dietary Advice, the Trump Administration Tells Consumers to Eat More Red Meat

By Georgina Gustin

Riders on a bike bus in Santa Fe, N.M. Credit: Ryan Harris

More Children Are Powering Their Own Wheels to School as Part of ‘Bike Buses’

By Tina Deines

operating room

Health Care Providers Are Dropping a Common Anesthesia Drug That’s Also a Climate Super Pollutant

By Phil McKenna

People walk through rain showers and cold temperatures in Philadelphia on Nov. 19. Credit: Matthew Hatcher/Getty Images)

The Real Pain of Climate Change Is Easy to Feel, but Increasingly Difficult to Study

By Chad Small

People walk across a road amid dense smog in Lahore on Dec. 12. Credit: Arif Ali/AFP via Getty Images

In Lahore’s Smog Season, This Gen Z Doctor Is Centering Climate Change

By Keerti Gopal

The construction of a data center in Loudoun County, Virginia. Credit: Charles Paullin/Inside Climate News

Virginia Regulators Weigh Expanded Use of Data Center’s Polluting Generators 

By Charles Paullin

A study determined that gas stoves were the primary source of indoor nitrogen dioxide pollution. Credit: Olivier Douliery/AFP via Getty Images

Gas Stoves Account For More Than Half of Some Americans’ Exposure to a Known Toxic Substance, New Research Concludes

By Phil McKenna

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