Majority of Hispanics, Latinos consume news in English
The findings of the Pew Research Center report are consistent with ongoing trends that signify a decades-long shift within the U.S. Hispanic and Latino community – a preponderance for English.
The findings of the Pew Research Center report are consistent with ongoing trends that signify a decades-long shift within the U.S. Hispanic and Latino community – a preponderance for English.
A resource for Latinos trying to expand its reach faces some of its responsibilities being cut.
In Missouri and Nebraska, information about maternal mortality rates among Hispanic women is not reliable. That’s a challenge for health care organizations that depend on those statistics to send resources to that population.
Stuck between a rock and a stork, millennials are juggling financial strain, societal expectations, and the very real need for caregiving.
According to a report from the National Research Center on Hispanic Children & Families, there were 18.6 million Latino children (ages 18
“As other news outlets are forced to retreat, we are meeting the challenge and advancing,” said Hugo Balta, Publisher of LNN.