Black gay men face major PrEP access gaps due to cost, stigma, mistrust, and provider silence—despite high HIV impact; ...
There’s growing evidence that medicine risks losing talent from poor and working-class, Black and Latino communities.
Are stricter felony drug possession penalties effective tools for propelling users into care? One reporter's deep dive raises serious doubts.
The USC Center for Health Journalism is pleased to announce the launch of the 2026 Ethnic Media Collaborative, with a Feb.
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 ...
Sarah Macaraeg is an investigative reporter in Memphis with The Commercial Appeal/USA Today network. Her stories have resulted in the elimination of phone fees charged juvenile detainees in Shelby ...
Mary Otto is a former Washington Post Reporter and winner of the 2010 Gies Award for Outstanding Achievement for her reporting on dental care for the poor, she is now on sabbatical authoring a book on ...
Roger Smith joined the Center for Health Reporting in 2013 after 35 years as an editor and reporter with the Los Angeles Times. He became national editor of the Times the week after Barak Obama was ...
Lisa Morehouse is an award-winning independent public radio and print journalist, who’s filed for KQED’s The California Report, NPR’s Latino USA and All Things Considered, Edutopia magazine and ...
I am the health reporter for Vida en el Valle, a McClatchy publication in Central California. I cover health issues impacting Latinos in the Central Valley. I have worked for more than a decade in ...
I am an assistant professor and practicing endocrinologist at the Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California (USC) and Children's Hospital Los Angeles. My research program is ...
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