A reporting team turns to makes use of silicone wristbands that can detect up to 75 types of pesticides to gauge farmworkers' ...
After being displaced by a fire, elderly Asian residents feel depressed and isolated as they struggle to access basic ...
A laundromat in Smith River became a crucial entry point for reporting on undocumented farmworkers' health care access in ...
Helping journalists investigate health challenges and solutions in their communities with fact-based, rigorous reporting that serves as a catalyst for change. At the Center, we advance "Impact ...
We believe health is an essential part of every story. We believe impact reporting leads to healthier communities. We believe engagement and diversity enrich journalism. The Center for Health ...
The Center for Health Journalism’s “Just One Breath” collaborative on valley fever brought together reporters from the Bakersfield Californian, Radio Bilingüe in Fresno, Valley Public Radio in Fresno ...
Domestic violence affects more than 10 million Americans each year. And in California, more than half of families have been touched by domestic violence. Yet it is often treated as a criminal or ...
Our Data Fellowship offers journalists an opportunity to transform their reporting by training them to “interview the data” as if it were a human source. Equipped with the tools to find original ...
James E. Causey co-authors the Center for Health Journalism's Health Divide weekly column. He is an award-winning special projects reporter for the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and a Senior Fellow for ...
Our California Fellowship is designed to support reporters in the Golden State pursuing ambitious, enterprising projects on overlooked health and health equity issues. You decide what stories need to ...
Teena Apeles is the national engagement editor at the Center for Health Journalism at the University of Southern California’s Annenberg School of Journalism. A native Angeleno, prior to joining the ...