Deborah Schoch
Senior Writer
Senior Writer
I'm one of the founding journalists at the USC Center for Health Reporting, a new program created to help improve health reporting in communities across California. We work with newspapers and other outlets to report and write in-depth articles about health care. We're based at the USC Annenberg School for Communication & Journalism and are funded by the California HealthCare Foundation.
Before joining the Center, I spent 18 years at the Los Angeles Times and studied environmental science as a Nieman Fellow at Harvard. I'm a native of Ithaca, N.Y., and have lived in California for two decades.
<p>How one journalist learned to sit back and simply be a patient when she needed cataract surgery.</p>
<p>In his eye-opening new book, Dr. Otis Brawley takes aim at doctors who prescribe too much, drug companies who promise too much, and the system that rewards them both with hefty incomes and sales.</p>
<p>Deborah Schoch timed her two-part series, "Fault Lines," which looks at hospitals and seismic safety, to coincide with the Great California Shakeout, a day dedicated to earthquake preparedness. Here are her tips for reporting on earthquake safety at hospitals in your community.</p>
<p>As Chico eyes possible wood-burning restrictions, the Enterprise-Record launched a two-month reporting project to better understand the medical, environmental, political and economic realities of heating homes with wood.</p>