Back-To-School Health Advice For Families From Harlem To Hollis
A healthy start to a new school year starts with a visit to your child’s doctor.
A healthy start to a new school year starts with a visit to your child’s doctor.
The agency wants consumers to be aware of seasonal risks With the temperatures rising and school nearing its end, many folks in Harlem will be getting ready for vacations, time spent by the pool, and tons more downtime.
The de Blasio Administration joined New York Attorney General Letitia James and a coalition of 23 cities, states, and municipalities today in a lawsuit against a Final Rule issued by the Trump Administration’s Department of Health and Human Services.
The Health Department announced today that the number of measles cases has grown to 390, including two pregnant women diagnosed with the infection, one diagnosed in mid-April.
The Health Department announced today that it will start vaccinating raccoons in several northern Manhattan parks.
Being fearful of measles in Harlem, the Health Department today announced it is issuing three civil summonses, subject to fines, to people who failed to comply with the Commissioner’s Emergency Order mandating measles vaccination.
After the Measles outbreak in Brooklyn, we know Measles is a highly contagious disease caused by a virus that is spread through the air by breathing, coughing, or sneezing.
The Health Department today announced that it has identified four raccoons with rabies in and around Manhattan’s Inwood Hill Park since January.
The Health Department today conducted an emergency evacuation and surge exercise at 55 hospitals and 10 nursing homes.
Touro College of Osteopathic Medicine (TouroCOM) has opened a student-run, free clinic to serve the Harlem community, Dean David Forstein, DO, announced.
The Health Department today released the 2018 Community Health Profiles, analyzing health in all 59 community districts across the city.
On Friday, November 30, 2018, Washington Heights, NY Councilman Mark Levine encourages Harlemites and New Yorkers to receive their flu shots.
The Health Department today is reminding New Yorkers from Harlem to Hollis that all persons 6 months of age and older should get a seasonal flu vaccine.
In recognition of National Immunization Awareness Month, the Health Department reminds New Yorkers about the importance of vaccines.
Patch reports that more than two-dozen raccoons have been found dead in Central Park and Harlem in the past two months, stoking fears of a deadly viral outbreak that can make animals display zombie-like behavior, city officials said.