![Bruce Anderson, Hawaii's health director.](https://centerforhealthjournalism.org/sites/default/files/styles/teaser_list_thumbnail_large/public/title_images/Dept-of-Health-Director-Bruce-Anderson.jpg?itok=4ScuUPtt)
Despite Hawaii’s reputation as a racial paradise, the state is home to striking income disparities that fall along racial and ethnic lines.
Despite Hawaii’s reputation as a racial paradise, the state is home to striking income disparities that fall along racial and ethnic lines.
A new reporting project asks, "Why do people of color in an affluent city lack basic medical attention?"
COVID-19 has underscored the disparities faced by immigrant communities in access to medical care and financial support in the state.
It's hard to tell the story of how the Marshallese came to America without starting with the nuclear bombs.
Disparities in youth fitness are a longstanding problem. The pandemic threatens to widen the gap.
Utah has the lowest smoking rate in the nation, yet the biggest source of cancer deaths in the state is lung cancer. How can that be?
Families such as the Stewarts rely on a health care system that is overwhelmingly white and has historically treated patients of color poorly.
Philadelphia families grapple with a medical mystery: Why is this chronic condition rising so quickly in children of color?
Since he lost his housing and began living on the streets in 2010, Theo Henderson has found it challenging to manage his Type 2 diabetes. Having so little control over his environment, it’s extremely difficult to follow any sort of routine, which is something diabetes patients say is key in helping
A reporter sets out to explore Santa Cruz County's persistent homelessness crisis and the health risks it poses to both those without homes and the broader community.