-
A recent study found military families are spending more time and money to find places to live when they change duty stations.
-
Knowing not all veterans addicted to drugs are ready to quit, VA doctors are offering clean supplies, mental health care and other services to reduce some of the risks that come with injection drug use.
-
When National Guard members and reservists deploy, a federal law is supposed to preserve their civilian jobs and benefits. But in some states, government employees can't access those protections.
-
Misunderstood and sometimes parodied, the U.S. Space Force is educating the public about its missionThe newest military service branch is responsible for protecting satellites and other objects in space, which it expects will be critical parts of future wars.
-
The State Partnership Program has quietly become a powerful tool for diplomacy and modeling U.S. values around the world.
-
Little is known about COVID-19 cases in which symptoms persist for months. Affected service members may have trouble performing their duties or getting treatment.
-
More than four years after a former airman killed 26 people at a rural Texas church, advocates say the military still needs to do more to prevent violent service members and veterans from owning guns.
-
A VA study concluded that veterans experience bulimia at about three times the civilian rate.
-
Constant and sometimes sudden moves can disrupt military families' finances and cause challenges with their children’s schools and medical care.
-
The Marine Corps investigated whether the reservist son of a former San Diego Republican official tried to join a white supremacist group. But the outcome of the case provided little clarity into the military's new anti-extremism policy.
-
The sweeping makeover of the VA's health care system would affect dozens of hospitals, clinics, nursing homes, and other facilities.
-
The report from Blue Star Families found some service members are passing up career-advancing moves because they don't want to relocate to certain cities.