Big Data Meets Modern Medicine in a Life-Saving Equation
Where is the balance between economic calculations that save more lives in the long-term and the individual human right to health care in the near?
Where is the balance between economic calculations that save more lives in the long-term and the individual human right to health care in the near?
Meet the Sri Lankan monk who's sees good karma in organ and tissue donation.
A few of Greenland's biggest glaciers began melting a decade ago. And scientists are trying to puzzle out a mystery story with big consequences for the future of the island's fast-melting ice sheet.
Land mines are a horrific by-product of Angola's 27-year civil war. See how they continue to affect the lives of people around the country.
Chile is turning to small-scale energy projects to meet its energy needs, but are they creating new problems for local communities in the process?
The renewal of diplomatic ties with the U.S. was a victory for Cuba, but the socialist government faces a challenging future as President Raul Castro reaches his twilight years.
Yarisley Rivero, of Havana, talks about what it's like to be separated from her husband, Yoandri, who emigrated from Cuba to the United States this fall.
What China's huge water transfer project means for those at both ends of the pipeline.
When you hear that someone is positive for HIV, do you think that person probably deserved it? Do you think that person is dirty? That’s HIV shaming—making someone feel ashamed of living with HIV.
Men and women across Mali have devoted their lives to the movement to end female genital cutting. Here one woman explains her very personal reasons for joining this fight.
Carl Gierstorfer recalls horrendous conditions at Redemption Hospital in Monrovia, Liberia, during early days of the Ebola outbreak.
In Peru, thriving agribusiness, declining aquifers and conflicts over water.