
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.
This finding is a reminder for journalists to inquire whether clinician sources have financial disclosures that might bias their views.
The U.S. has three different reporting systems to track maternal mortality — and their results frequently don’t agree.
Numerous headlines declared that maternal mortality has been on the rise, but it wasn’t true. Here’s how flawed research misled…
For journalists, the new designation offers a pathway to examine what local hospitals are doing to improve diabetes care.
Reporters Lisa Schencker and Emily Hoerner exposed how state regulators and hospitals fail to protect patients from sexual abuse.
Patient safety indicators continue to lag from the pandemic downturn as federal officials tout their effort to improve patient safety.
Despite recent reforms, journalists still need to be diligent about covering the evidence on which accelerated approvals are often based.
Takeaways for journalists from the White House advisory committee’s recommendations to improve patient safety.
Learn how to obtain and use state-collected hospital discharge data to report stories about health care quality.
Endocrinology experts say that TikTok influencers are spreading harmful misinformation about “hormone balancing.”