ABOUT ERIN

Can a public health journalist be a public health EDUCATOR?

It’s a niche question, to be sure. But it’s one I’ve asked myself frequently, as a global public health journalist working to finish her master’s in public health degree in health education and promotion.

Health educators are usually employed by government agencies or for-profit hospitals and medical systems. Can a journalist, beholden to no agenda but the truth and divorced from politics, accomplish the same mission — and perhaps even do a better job, given their objective approach to presenting the facts?

I think so — and i’ve made it my mission.

I’m a seasoned public health journalist with master’s-level education in health education, communication, and promotion. While working as Fortune magazine’s first global public health reporter, I covered virtual press conferences held by the World Health Organization, Pan American Health Organization, and the U.S. Centers Control and Prevention. When I wasn’t breaking global health news on topics like COVID, Ebola, polio, and other dangerous pathogens, I wrote daily explainers and weekend features on topics like the causes and biomarkers of Long COVID; the rapid, intense nature of SARS-CoV-2 evolution; and the validity of the term “immunity debt.”

For me, good public health journalism looks like leading the conversation on vital health topics — not simply parroting what other publications are writing. It means asking tough questions to tease out the politics that have become so entwined with public health. And it entails shedding light on health inequities throughout the world — regardless of what feathers such reporting may ruffle.

If our vision for public health coverage aligns, let's talk.

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