Washington, D.C. (7News) — January marks National Thyroid Awareness Month. On Wednesday, Thyroid Cancer survivor, Brittany Mckelvey, joined Good Morning Washington to share her story and how Nuclear Medicine saved her life.
Friends and creative collaborators remember famed Native visual artist and curator Quick-to-See Smith, who died at 85 on Jan. 24.
Luke's cancer battle sparked his family to campaign in Washington, D.C., to help other families going through the same thing they did.
If passed, this bill would direct the Secretary of the VA to study cancer incidences and mortality rates among aviators and aircrew who served in the Navy, Air Force, and Marine Corps. This legislation is critical as it would improve our understanding of the link between military service and cancer risks among Veteran aviators.
GOP Representative Rich McCormick suggested that free lunch allows schoolchildren to "sponge off the government."
President Trump’s announcement of a freeze on federal loans and grants has left officials through Maryland, Virginia and the District scrambling to understand the impact.
Investigators are searching for answers after Wednesday evening’s midair collision that left 67 people dead in Washington, D.C.
People gathering outside Gravelly Point near the American Airlines crash site offered prayers as recovery efforts continue.
There are many questions online about how the fatal crash between a passenger jet and Army helicopter. Here’s what we can VERIFY so far.
As authorities search for answers about why an American Airlines regional passenger jet collided mid-air with an Army Black Hawk helicopter, details about those who lost their lives in the tragedy are starting to emerge.
As many as 60 passengers and four crew members were aboard American Eagle Flight 5342, and the Black Hawk helicopter was carrying three soldiers. There were no survivors.
D.C. once again is participating in the annual point-in-time count, a controversial headcount of the a city’s unhoused population.