A U.K.-born approach to health care is coming to San Diego, where doctors will prescribe art and culture to help young patients ease anxiety and depression.
MORE STORIES
-
The activists have filed a public records request demanding answers from city officials about their cooperation with federal immigration officials.
-
KPBS Explores Hidden San Diego shows us a butterfly garden with a unique past.
-
As President Trump heads into his 11th week in office, voters remain split on his job performance. A poll this month shows just under half of voters believe Trump is doing a good job.
-
California voters overwhelmingly passed a ballot measure that increases pay to doctors with Medi-Cal patients. The Newsom administration missed an early deadline to begin implementing it.
-
A committee in the California legislature plans to vote on bills Tuesday that would restrict transgender athletes from participating in girls sports.
-
If government is “made for the people, made by the people and answerable to the people,” then some of the people, it appears, are turning away from the job.
-
Two buses departed San Diego early this morning to join thousands at César Chávez Day rally in Delano, advocating for immigrant and labor rights.
-
Customers will receive an energy credit on their April bills, thanks to the California Climate Credit administered by the California Public Utilities Commission, it was announced Monday.
-
A new state report reveals Kaiser has yet to fix major mental health violations, leaving patients waiting for care as the strike continues.
-
The average price of a gallon of self-serve regular gasoline in San Diego County rose Monday for the eighth consecutive day, increasing 1.3 cents to $4.818, a day after rising 2.9 cents.
Sign up for our newsletters!
Keep up with all the latest news, arts and culture, and TV highlights from KPBS.
- San Diego Unified responds to ICE arrest outside Linda Vista Elementary
- Encinitas City Council advances homelessness restrictions
- USS Carl Vinson returns to San Diego after extended deployment
- Through dorms and density, more homes could be coming to the College Area
- California’s last beet sugar plant is closing. Can Imperial County keep the industry alive?