At college health centers, students battle misdiagnoses and inaccessible care
Duke University student Rose Wong worries the campus clinic is not capable of keeping people safe during the pandemic. (Bonnie Jo Mount/The Post)
Evelyn Lichtenwalter said Ball State University’s health center blamed her weight gain and stomach pain on a urinary tract infection before off-campus doctors found tumors on her bladder, uterus and ovaries. (Bonnie Jo Mount/The Post)
Molly Millsop’s right arm and shoulder were amputated in 2007 after Ohio University's health center didn't recognize she had a rare flesh-eating bacterial infection. (Bonnie Jo Mount/The Post)
The ability of campus health services to safeguard and care for students will be tested as never before by the pandemic as millions go back to school — and many colleges appear unprepared for the challenge.
Race is on to make glass vials to deliver vaccine worldwide
As scientists rush to test coronavirus vaccines in humans, a parallel scramble is underway to produce billions of medical-grade vials and syringes needed to inoculate the world’s population.
U.S. budget deficit shattered one-month record in June
Spending outpaced revenue by $864 billion as the pandemic has led to a surge in new spending and a dramatic decline in tax revenue, creating a massive gulf that requires more government borrowing.
Archaeologists and forensic scientists watch as excavation begins at Tulsa's Oaklawn Cemetery. (Nick Oxford for The Post)
A century after a race massacre, Tulsa finally digs for suspected mass graves
The excavation at the city's Oaklawn Cemetery comes nearly seven months after a team of forensic anthropologists and archaeologists announced that they had found “possible common graves” at two sites in the city.
Warriors? Red Wolves? Red Tails? Next step for Washington football team is securing rights.
With the old name officially retired, the team must legally lock down a new name before any announcement.
















