A new survey undertaken by the Catholic Union of Great Britain, a group set up to scrutinize public policy and make representations to the government on behalf of the church, discovered that 62% of 1,000 people interviewed said their mental and physical
Nearly five months ago, on May 5, 2023, the World Health Organization declared an end to the global COVID health emergency. After three long years, the government no longer considered us to be living in a pandemic. Despite the hardships and the
Recently, Cardinal Timothy Dolan asked, “Did we go too far on COVID-19 restrictions? Were we obedient to the biblical commands to be near the sick, to comfort the dying, to reverently bury the dead, and, for us deacons, priests and bishops, to
The results from the latest World Values Survey, summarized by the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate (CARA), shows the decline in Mass attendance in the U.S. For every 10 people who were at Mass every Sunday in 2019, 3 are
The National Catholic Educational Association says Catholic schools have recovered more quickly from the pandemic than its public school counterparts.
The successes, according to the NCEA, go across the board when looking separately at Black students, Hispanic students, students from low-income households, and
The COVID-19 pandemic overshadowed much of the college experience for this year's graduating class, but nursing school graduates may have felt this more acutely.
The pandemic forced them to initially learn procedures online that are very much hands-on, and it also constantly reminded
At Catholic college and university graduation ceremonies across the country, speakers praised students for lessons learned during these past four years that had nothing to do with classes, projects or late-night study sessions, but instead with how they adapted to their workload
Just when you thought children couldn't possibly spend more time with their faces buried in a screen, they have done just that.
Use of screen media is up 17% for teens (ages 13-18) and tweens (ages 8-12) from the start of the pandemic,
"Serious thinking" about inequality in health care "is a task we can no longer put off," Archbishop Vincenzo Paglia, president of the Pontifical Academy for Life, told a New York audience March 30.
Archbishop Paglia spoke on "The Serious Problem of Inequality in
Off and on, since the COVID-19 pandemic began and in-person instruction resumed, St. Joseph School counselor Suzanne Krumpelman in Fayetteville has spoken to students to gauge how they are coping.
During one informal survey, Krumpelman asked how many students know someone who has