William Heisel
Contributing Editor
Contributing Editor
I have reported on health for most of my career. My work as an investigative reporter at the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register exposed problems with the fertility industry, the trade in human body parts and the use of illegal drugs in sports. I helped create a first-of-its-kind report card judging hospitals on a wide array of measures for a story that was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. I was one of the lead reporters on a series of stories about lead in candy, a series that also was a finalist for the Pulitzer.For the Center for Health Journalism (previously known as Reporting on Health), I have written about investigative health reporting and occasionally broke news on my column, Antidote. I also was the project editor on the Just One Breath collaborative reporting series. These days, for the University of Washington, I now work as the Executive Director for Insitutue for Health Metrics and Evaluation's Client Services, a social enterprise. You can follow me on Twitter @wheisel.
A flexible spending account company explains why consumers often have to navigate bureaucratic mazes to turn in their health care expenses.
Here's what you can learn from a compelling and deeply-reported new investigation into the post-war deaths of veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan.
Why a company would fight customers at every turn over money they put into their own flexible spending accounts for healthcare?
Flexible spending accounts create more paperwork than necessary on the part of everyone involved – the patient, the government, and the private company managing the accounts. Is there a way to make any of this any easier?
Football is not a beautiful spectacle marred by occasional moments of ugliness but a three-hour head trauma drama. As we have learned more about the science of sports-related injuries, could some teams could use that science to inflict even more damage?
Reporters investigating the impact of valley fever in California dug up striking information about the disease's financial costs to taxpayers. Here's how they did it.
Could the head injuries so common in pro football lead to more Alzheimer's deaths among NFL players?
Four words a parent never wants to hear when leaving the hospital: "your baby has MRSA." What went wrong?
A seemingly comprehensive article used as the basis for big claims about the number of people in chronic pain is rooted in data more than a decade old. Why?
The shakeups continue at The American Journal of Bioethics as a co-editor resigns.