Close to 700 people in Georgia reported postpartum depressive symptoms in 2020, though the number of unreported cases likely makes that number much higher.
Three years after the start of the pandemic, millions of working age people still suffer from long COVID-19 and some lawmakers and advocates, including people with long COVID, say not enough is being done to protect their well-being and ensure they can continue to be employed.
Structural engineers are still trying to determine what caused a partial collapse of Savannah's federal courthouse last week.
Postpartum mental health issues are extremely common among new moms and experts say diagnosis and treatment aren’t always provided to those that need it.
New data from Climate Central indicates that Tornado Alley may be shifting east, impacting many counties in Georgia.
Georgia Power and the state Public Service Commission’s Public Interest Advocacy Staff have reached an agreement resulting in a slight reduction in the utility’s request to recover $2.1 billion in higher fuel costs from customers.
Police in Glynn County have made arrests in the case of a teen who ended up hospitalized after blacking out from severe intoxication.
Georgia farmers and researchers are hoping for more focus on technology as Congress works on the newest version of the Farm Bill.
The family of a detainee who died in the Gwinnett County jail is suing the private company that provides detainee health care.
The U.S. Office of National Drug Control Policy named a veterinary tranquilizer an “emerging threat” for humans when mixed with the opioid fentanyl, but pharmacists say they've been warning for years about irreversible overdose and extreme morbidity risks associated with xylazine.
Monday on Political Rewind: In an interview with CNN, Gov. Brian Kemp indicated he's not interested in passing gun control legislation. He also suggested Donald Trump can't win in 2024 if he keeps insisting he was robbed in 2020. Plus, a new study on the spread of right-wing extremism in schools.
Georgians’ right to fish in navigable portions of the state’s rivers and streams was safeguarded in the final seconds of this year’s legislative session.
After sailing through the Georgia House of Representatives, a bill aimed at reducing some prescription drug costs for consumers was blocked by a close vote in a Senate committee.
An international team of researchers, including four at the University of Georgia, are looking for ways to adapt one of Georgia’s top commodities: pecans.
The DeKalb County Zoning Board of Appeals has voted unanimously to reject an appeal for a land disturbance permit for the construction of the Atlanta Public Safety Training Center.
Carolyn Long Banks, the first Black woman to serve on the Atlanta City Council passed away yesterday.