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The DNAinfo archives brought to you by WNYC.
Read the press release here.

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9/11 health

Recent Headlines
Downtown »

Patients who have been getting free treatment for neurological problems and some other health conditions will lose that coverage when the Zadroga Act goes into effect, unless an exception is made.

Downtown »

Stuyvesant High School reopened less than a month after 9/11, putting students just blocks from the smoking pile of rubble at Ground Zero.

Downtown »

Dozens of people are submitting online questions about the new 9/11 health law.

Downtown »

Sheila Birnbaum, a legal expert, will weigh thousands of claims from those who are sick.

Downtown »

The FealGood Foundation is holding a forum at Queens College Sunday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Downtown »

Ken George will endure a long battle without compensation.

Downtown »

The FealGood Foundation is advising sick responders to sign up with their five-lawyer team as soon as possible.

Downtown »

The new 9/11 Health Law doesn't go into effect until July, so first responders do not need to make any hasty decisions.

Downtown »

At least 95 percent of WTC responders involved in a lawsuit against the city have agreed to a settlement.

Downtown »

First responders now have until Nov. 16 to file paperwork to opt into the settlement.

Downtown »

Today is the deadline for nearly 10,000 workers who inhaled toxic dust on 9/11 to join a multimillion settlement with the city.

Manhattan »

Workers made ill through their work at Ground Zero have an extra two months to decide if they'll take the city's deal.

Downtown »

The House will take the bill up again in the fall, but that could be too late for those who are sick.

Downtown »

Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand announced the June 29 hearing Friday morning across from the World Trade Center site.

Downtown »

Six hundred cleanup workers have sued the Battery Park City Authority seeking compensation for injuries and illnesses.