MORE STORIES
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Should doctors warn patients of a policy threat that may not come to pass? That's the question pending, as the Trump administration weighs whether to deny green cards to immigrants on Medicaid.
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One clinic that provides health care for San Diego's Native Americans says it fears it may have to limit services due to the partial government shutdown.
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After focusing on the #MeToo movement and voter engagement, this year's leaders of the San Diego Women's March say they're advocating for social change and are against the proposed changes to Title IX.
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Black Americans are more likely than whites to develop Alzheimer's. Yet black people studied appeared to have lower levels of a toxic substance associated with the disease, researchers say.
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San Diego Humane Society said the Pet Rescue and Adoption Act takes "puppy mills completely out of the picture."
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Barry Jenkins helms first U.S. feature film adaptation of a James Baldwin novel
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Choreographer Michael Mizerany talks about pushing boundaries
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After three hurricanes, a big snow storm and an ice storm, residents and staff of a retirement community in Charleston are starting to view evacuations as the reality of growing old on the coast.
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KPBS Midday EditionA new book delves into the complicated picture of what can happen to refugees after arriving in America. “Exiled: From the Killing Fields of Cambodia to California and Back” is by California author and former San Diego journalist Katya Cengel.
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- Smithsonian artists and scholars respond to White House list of objectionable art