Giles Bruce
Health reporter
Health reporter
Easily searchable, online databases don’t always exist. These three news reporters created their own — and so can you.
As the Supreme Court considers a challenge to the landmark law, a new study reveals important benefits for low-income women.
Once a coronavirus immunization is released for children, will parents be reluctant to get their kids vaccinated?
The surveys provide yet another look at how minorities and lower-income Americans have been disproportionately hurt by COVID-19.
Pollution and stress are tightly connected to place, which in turn is linked to race and class, as two UCSF researchers recently explained to journalists.
“In a weird and dark way, it’s a good time to be a health reporter," one freelancer said.
How do you find COVID-related racial disparities at nursing homes? Start with these tips.
This week's question: How can the media encourage people to get vaccinated, once a vaccine has been developed?
“You can’t allow a lack of data to stop you from reporting," says Poynter's Al Tompkins. "Report what you don’t have and constantly pound on that.”
“We just have to work a little harder, think a little harder and write a little more clearly to help the public understand what they need to understand.”