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Officials with the Arkansas Department of Health are working to determine the cause of an E. coli outbreak at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville.
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The National Football League is funding a new study by the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences looking at ways to treat chronic headaches without opioids.
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Central Arkansas’ population is still growing, despite a drop in life expectancy and fertility rates.
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A year after abortion effectively ended in Arkansas, more Arkansans than ever are seeking permanent sterilization, and abortion access groups have seen their costs increase.
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The National Science Foundation has awarded groups in three states a $1 million grant to form a plan to boost health and economic outcomes in the Mississippi River Delta.
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The eight-year-long project will see renovations and expansions to both Arkansas Children's facilities in Little Rock and Springdale.
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The schools will be built on the Sixth Street corridor and could bring hundreds of out-of-state students to downtown Little Rock.
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The five-year-long study will seek to address some of the gaps in treatment and health knowledge faced by women in the postpartum period.
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Former Gov. Asa Hutchinson supported blockage of a law he signed banning government mask mandates.
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The CDC's National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey will be in White County until mid-February.