Gary Schwitzer
Publisher
Publisher
Gary Schwitzer has specialized in health care journalism for nearly 50 years. He is founder and publisher of the website HealthNewsReview.org, once leading a team of about 50 people who graded daily health news reporting by major U.S. news organizations, and who also graded health care PR news releases. The project won a Knight-Batten Award for Innovations in Journalism. For nine years he taught health journalism and media ethics at the University of Minnesota. He is now an Adjunct Associate Professor in the university's School of Public Health. Gary worked in television medical news for 15 years – including being in charge of the CNN medical news unit.
The Kaiser Family Foundation published his 2009 report on the state of U.S. health journalism. In 2010, he wrote “Covering Medical Research: A Guide For Reporting on Studies” for members of the Association of Health Care Journalists (AHCJ).
His articles on health journalism have appeared in many different publications, including the Columbia Journalism Review, Nieman Reports, the Poynter.org website, the Journal of the American Medical Association, JAMA Internal Medicine, BMJ, PLoS Medicine, and the newsletters and websites of the Association of Health Care Journalists and of the American Society of News Editors.
He has led health journalism workshops at 10 consecutive AHCJ national conferences, at the NIH Medicine in the Media series, at the MIT Medical Evidence boot camps, and internationally for National Cancer Institute (NCI) workshops in Rio de Janeiro, Guadalajara, San Juan, Beijing, and in New Delhi and Mumbai, India.
He gave a keynote address at the International Shared Decision Making conference in Lima, Peru in 2013 and delivered a plenary address at the National Medicines Symposium in Brisbane, Australia in 2014.
In 2014, he was named one of 25 Champions of Shared Decision Making by the Informed Medical Decisions Foundation. Also in 2014, the American Medical Writers Association honored him with the McGovern Award for preeminent contributions to medical communication. In 2016, Rodale, Inc. named him to its inaugural “Rodale 100″ list of “innovators who are changing the face of the health and wellness universe.”
<p>The promotion of expensive new medical technologies is so strong that journalists must critically evaluate the evidence.</p>
<p>It’s important for journalists and consumers to understand that not all claims they hear about supposed benefits of medical interventions have been proven to impact things that really matter in peoples’ lives.</p>
<p>My second annual article on some of the health care news releases I saved in 2011 before I clean out the folder and start all over again in 2012.</p>
<p>Just because something is published in a major journal or in a news release from a major medical center, it doesn't mean it's set in stone.</p>
<p>Naughty or nice? New creativity in hospitals' marketing of their expensive new technologies.</p>
<p>We've heard from many journalists about "the impact" we have. Hard to quantify, but......</p>
<p>Improving our reporting on evidence: lessons from 1,600 stories in 6 years on HealthNewsReview.org</p>
<p>See this collection of primers, backgrounders, and links to help journalists and consumers do a better job evaluating evidence, medical studies, and claims about health care interventions.</p>