Insights

You learn a lot when you spend months reporting on a given issue or community, as our fellows can attest. Whether you’re embarking on a big new story or seeking to go deeper on a given issue, it pays to learn from those who’ve already put in the shoe leather and crunched the data. In these essays and columns, our community of journalists steps back from the notebooks and tape to reflect on key lessons, highlight urgent themes, and offer sage advice on the essential health stories of the day. 

Author(s)
By Barbara Feder Ostrov

<p><strong>Foreclosures:</strong> Heart palpitations, insomnia, acid reflux: <a href="http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/09/02/MN891F6B62… can make you sick</a>, according to a new report covered by the San Francisco’s Victoria Colliver.</p> <p><strong>Flawed Polls:</strong> Political science professor Terry Jones <a href="http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_hb6666/is_318_40/ai_n54804366/">e… flaws in media coverage of health care polls</a> in the St. Louis Journalism Review. &nbsp;</p>

Author(s)
By Barbara Feder Ostrov

<p>Here's what we're reading today:</p> <p><strong>Meridia:</strong> Sales of the weight loss drug Meridia might be about to go on a diet. New England Journal of Medicine editors are calling for it <a href="http://www.fiercepharma.com/story/nejm-fuels-calls-withdraw-abbotts-mer… be pulled off the marke</a>t in the wake of a new study documenting its risks.</p>

Author(s)
By Barbara Feder Ostrov

<p>Here's what we're reading today:</p> <p><strong>Breast Cancer:</strong> Not fun, but it works: preemptively removing the ovaries or breasts of women who carry either of the two BRCA breast cancer genes can help save the women’s lives even if they’ve already been diagnosed with cancer, according to a new study. The Los Angeles Times’ Thomas H. Maugh <a href="http://articles.latimes.com/2010/aug/31/science/la-sci-breast-cancer-20… the story</a>.</p>

Author(s)
By Manoj Jain

<p>Some months ago, the receptionist in my clinic handed me a registered letter. The name of the sender seemed familiar. "Dear Sir," the letter read. "Please be advised that this letter serves as official notice that I am considering a potential claim against you in a medical Malpractice claim in regard to my husband. . . ." I stood, stunned. My white coat, which held the daily tools of my profession — my list of patients, the Sanford antibiotic manual, a black stethoscope — felt extraordinarily heavy.</p>

Author(s)
By Amy Wallace

Like writing about abortion or animal rights, writing about vaccines inevitably raises the ire of certain readers. It is not for the timid. Journalist Amy Wallace writes about being sued by an anti-vaccine activist and offers tips for covering this controversial and emotionally-charged topic.

Author(s)
By William Heisel

<p><em>Antidote</em> wrote last week about an odd rule set by the <a href="http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?gl=us&amp;hl=en&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;msa=0&am…; State Board of Medical Examiners that allows a doctor accused of “inappropriate conduct” with female patients to continue seeing patients with a chaperone, unless they are 60 or older. At that age, the board considers the patients risk-free and allows the doctor to see them alone.</p>