
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.
Most U.S. hospitals will soon be required to report whether they follow 25 best practices to ensure patient safety, to…
Journalist Katherine Eban describes her and her students’ STAT investigation about Mount Sinai’s Living Brain Project.
Opponents of universal health care often predict it would lead to long waits to see a doctor, but that’s already…
A series of rulings has expanded the power of judges to second-guess the decisions of federal scientists and other government…
Scientific studies have begun to show the effects of state abortion restrictions on patients since the Supreme Court overturned Roe…
Veteran freelance journalist Charlotte Huff explored the tolerability of cancer drugs in a recent article.
CMS is about to release its star ratings for hospitals. Journalists should know about the limitations of these much-watched scores.
News articles about lab-developed tests contributed to the FDA’s “growing body of evidence” that inaccurate tests threaten public health.
HJ24 panelists covered how to read, analyze and find stories in reports generated by inspections performed in response to a…
Reporters found that, over a decade, at least 94 people died after police used forced sedation to restrain them.