By Melissa Patrick Kentucky Health News The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has banned Red Dye No. 3 from food, beverages and drugs. The Center for Science in the Public Interest, which brought the petition to ban red No.
Tulsi Gabbard, President Donald Trump's pick to be director of national intelligence, is set to go before lawmakers Thursday for a confirmation hearing likely to focus on some of her past views on Russia and Syria.
Science sector reforms are long overdue. But questions remain about implementation and whether there will be enough funding to be effective.
Trump to sign executive order opening detention camp at Guantanamo Bay for 30,000 migrants: Live updates - President announced new order during signing of Laken Riley Act at White House
The museum will restore its South Portico with a $10 million grant from the Dreihaus Foundation, reopening the original entrance and improving access.
The Smithsonian Institution is closing its diversity office and freezing all federal hiring. The decision will affect dozens of American museums, research centers and libraries, as well as the National Zoo.
This move is part of the Trump administration’s coordinated approach to censor the science underpinning our foundational health and environmental protections. Taken together, these reckless and dangerous actions will put millions of American families in harm’s way.
Paper mills’ are contaminating the world’s scholarly output with fake papers that hinder research. Lifesaving biomedical fields are especially hard hit.
FDA faces radical changes under Trump, risking public health and regulatory stability. • Trump reinstates the “Schedule F” order, threatening federal employees’ job security and increasing political influence over regulatory decisions.
Medical research depends on government money -- even a day's delay in the intricate funding process throws science off-kilter.
On January 16, 2025, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (“FDA”) published a highly anticipated proposed rule on front-of-package (“FOP”)
At least in one respect, the Trump administration's pause on health communications breaks a pattern that's held for at least three decades.