While the White House’s new nutrition strategy includes some promising ideas, it contains major omissions, according to nutrition experts at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.
The repercussions of body dissatisfaction and appearance-based discrimination are costing the U.S. economy billions of dollars annually, according to a new report.
Days of extreme heat driven by climate change are disproportionately harming Black and Hispanic children with asthma, according to experts.
With the start of the new Supreme Court term, the justices in the conservative majority could significantly harm public health through a number of rulings, according to Michelle Williams, Dean of Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.
Lawmakers in several states are considering bills restricting the sale of non-prescription diet supplements to minors.
Matcha—a type of powdered green tea—is touted as a superfood for the high amounts of potentially beneficial compounds it contains.
The number of people experiencing an “extreme smoke day”—a day with unhealthy air quality because of dangerous smoke—has jumped 27-fold over the past decade, according to a new study.
Spending time outdoors around grass, trees, and other plants can improve both mental and physical health.
Mental health burdens can be a big impediment for people experiencing infertility, according to Harvard Chan School’s Carmen Messerlian.
Harvard Chan School experts offer comments and context about the coronavirus in a variety of media outlets.