
Bara Vaida is an experienced journalist who reported on business, consumer, wellness, and policy issues before joining the Institute in August 2023. As the director of training, Vaida is developing and expanding the Institute’s professional development portfolio and training strategy; creating unique learning opportunities for journalists; and producing timely resources for journalists, including the Institute’s afternoon newsletter, The Latest. Through her 30 years as both a newsroom and independent journalist, Vaida has navigated the halls of Congress and has gained an in-depth understanding of corporate, economic, and international business issues, health care policy, lobbying, and technology. She has worked for some of Washington’s biggest news organizations, including National Journal, Agence France-Presse, and Bloomberg News and has been a guest on numerous radio and television shows, including, C-SPAN’s Washington Journal, Washington Week with Gwen Ifill, and WAMU’s Kojo Nnamdi show. In 2020, at the height of the coronavirus pandemic, Vaida served as the core topic leader on infectious diseases for the Association of Health Care Journalists. In that role, she coordinated training and resources to assist her peers as they reported in real time the ongoing health crisis.
The threat of emerging infectious diseases is expanding as climate change is altering the range of animals, people and the…
In May, the measles outbreak became the worst in 30 years, as communities across the country continue to battle the…
Americans should be aware that diseases spread by kissing bugs, mosquitoes and ticks are sharply on the rise in the…
In April 1984, then-U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Margaret Heckler announced the National Cancer Institute had discovered the virus…
Ticks are emerging earlier from winter hibernation and remaining active for more weeks of the year as the climate is…
One angle journalists can take to tackle huge issue like climate change and public health is to take a focused…
Predicting whether a pathogen will have an impact on a few people or an entire population would be a huge…
Researchers are looking to old drugs, plants and viruses in a race to find new ways to kill disease-causing microbes…
Since antibiotics were widely introduced in the mid 1940’s, scientists warned of microbes’ innate ability to evolve and develop resistance.…
There is no question that the changing climate is already having an impact on Americans’ health. Heat waves, wild fires…