
Mary Chris Jaklevic is an independent journalist based in Chicago. Formerly AHCJ’s Patient Safety Health Beat Leader, she has covered health care finance, clinical care and medical research for a variety of professional and consumer publications. Her interest in patient safety issues and the potential harms of medical interventions was honed by her experience as a contributor to HealthNewsReview.org, a project that aimed to improve health care journalism by critiquing the accuracy and balance of media messages about medical treatments and tests. She’s a longtime AHCJ member and served on the board for two terms.
The troubled U.S. kidney transplant system is about to get an overhaul. Or at least, half of it is.
Hospitals performed more than 200,000 unnecessary back surgeries over a three-year period, according to a health care watchdog group.
Emergency department boarding has worsened in recent years as hospitals face financial pressure to wring out excess inpatient capacity.
Severe maternal morbidity, which affects tens of thousands annually, is a useful gauge for journalists looking to track maternal health.
ProPublica reporter Max Blau explains how he wrote about how insurance ghost networks and what journalists need to know about…
Obtaining equitable care even after pandemic-era anti-discrimination policies remains an often-silent struggle for people with disabilities.
A recent report from Public Citizen shows wide variation in how often state medical boards discipline doctors.
Pervasive bias in the health system against patients with disabilities became glaringly apparent during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The abrupt recall of a new treatment for sickle cell disease serves as a reminder of why journalists should avoid…
The new system aims to detect potential safety issues with medical devices nearly in real time by monitoring data like…