ICYMI: A look back at Sunday's 60 Minutes
Investigating military vehicle training deaths; Shorthanded hospitals pushed to brink by COVID; The dark legacy of Canada's residential schools.
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Investigating military vehicle training deaths; Shorthanded hospitals pushed to brink by COVID; The dark legacy of Canada's residential schools.
Sharyn Alfonsi reports from Louisville, Kentucky, as shorthanded hospitals are having their limits tested by the pandemic.
COVID-19 deaths in the U.S. continue to spike as cases from the Omicron surge drop. The recent rise in deaths is being seen mostly in states with low vaccination rates. Lilia Luciano reports.
60 Minutes producer Guy Campanile went inside the University of Louisville Hospital to get an up-close look at how COVID is still straining the health care system
Last week, "Face the Nation" spoke to a group of parents to get their perspective on parenting during the pandemic, and the prospect of soon being able to get very young children vaccinated.
Sharyn Alfonsi reports from Louisville, Kentucky, as shorthanded hospitals are having their limits tested by the pandemic.
Nearly two years into the pandemic, 60 Minutes examines how COVID is affecting some pregnant women, their babies, and the doctors who treat them.
Sunday, Sharyn Alfonsi reports from Louisville, Kentucky, where nurses and doctors warn health care is being pushed to the brink by COVID hospitalizations and staff shortages.
Since the COVID-19 pandemic began, correspondent Luke Burbank has become part of a silent but cozy majority: those who prefer working horizontally.
Although COVID-19 infections are dropping drastically across the nation, deaths remain at record highs with nearly 2,400 Americans succumbing to the virus each day. Lilia Luciano has more.
An Arkansas jail that has been accused of treating inmates with ivermectin without their knowledge has been sued dozens of times for allegedly providing inadequate health care — including the claim that it withheld medication and improperly treated fractured bones. Here's what a CBS News investigation has found.
The data from wastewater samples can help communities detect the virus early on.
Everything you need to know about taking advantage of the government's new mask program
We're here to answer your questions about N95 masks, KF94 and KN95 masks for kids, at-home COVID-19 tests and more.
Confused by mask options? These N95, KF94 and KN95 masks are your best bet in reducing the spread of COVID-19
The CDC order allows U.S. border officials to expel migrants to Mexico or their home countries without allowing them to request asylum.
It's been a long road to the 2022 Winter Olympics — no one knows that better than the athletes and supporters attending the Games.
Democrats are hoping to move swiftly with the Supreme Court confirmation process once President Biden chooses a nominee. But the party's slim majority and concerns about COVID could interfere. CBS News congressional correspondent Scott MacFarlane has more from Capitol Hill.
The White House said it will be ready to distribute Pfizer's vaccine for young children as soon as it has authorization, which could be as soon as March. Nancy Chen has the latest.
Average monthly rents increased by 14% across the U.S. in 2021. Costs rose even higher, up to 40%, in some popular cities like Austin, Texas. CBS MoneyWatch reporter Megan Cerullo joins CBS News' Tanya Rivero and Nikki Battiste with the details.
Author John M. Barry's latest article in The New York Times is titled, "What We Can Learn From How The 1918 Pandemic Ended." He joins CBS News to break down the history of pandemics in America and what we can learn from it in dealing with COVID-19.
At least 37 federal lawsuits have been filed against the jail and/or its doctor since his contract began in 2016.
Pfizer has asked the FDA for emergency use authorization for its COVID-19 vaccine for children under 5, who have so far been ineligible for the vaccines. Nikki Battiste has the latest.
The 82-year-old representative said he is vaccinated and boosted.
Experts are sounding the alarm over an increased rate of depression and suicide among Black youth. Dr. Amanda Calhoun, an adult and child-adolescent psychiatry resident at the Child Study Center in the Yale School of Medicine, joins CBS News' Tanya Rivero and Jericka Duncan with more.
Senators convened for a rare Saturday session aimed at ending the government shutdown, with no signs of an imminent breakthrough.
The FAA ordered airlines to cut thousands of flights ahead of this weekend as the agency deals with air traffic controller shortages during the government shutdown.
The Federal Aviation Administration on Saturday ordered MD-11 and MD-11F aircrafts to be grounded as authorities investigate the deadly UPS plane crash in Kentucky.
Kilmar Abrego Garcia's lawyers argued an interview conducted by a U.S. asylum officer last month did not amount to sufficient due process.
Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson on Friday froze, for now, a lower court order that required the Trump administration to swiftly provide full SNAP benefits to roughly 42 million Americans.
Under a deal between the Commanders and D.C., the team will return to the nation's capital in a new stadium expected to cost nearly $4 billion.
More than a dozen people were standing outside Bradley's, a popular LGBTQ bar, when the car crashed into them after a police chase.
Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa, whose rebel forces ousted longtime ruler Bashar al-Assad late last year, is due to meet President Trump at the White House on Monday.
A driver fired shots at Customs and Border Patrol agents in Chicago's Little Village neighborhood on Saturday, according to the Department of Homeland Security.