January 10, 2025

The Journalism and Women Symposium (JAWS), the premier not-for-profit organization dedicated to professional growth and empowerment of women journalists, has awarded the 2025 JAWS Health Journalism Fellowship to eight new and emerging health reporters who will examine disparities and inequities in U.S. health care. 

With critical support from the Commonwealth Fund, the fellowship is in its third year. The goal of the fellowship is to train more journalists in health reporting and help diversify the journalist pool for better and more inclusive reporting on health issues across the nation. 

Each fellow will spend the next seven months working on a substantive reporting project, assisted by a reporting grant of $4,000. Additionally, fellows receive a one-year membership to JAWS and registration and travel expenses to the JAWS annual conference. 

Under a separate grant from The Commonwealth Fund, the fellows will attend the Association of Health Care Journalists annual conference in Los Angeles in May. They will have an opportunity to participate in educational sessions, network with veteran health journalists and conduct some on the ground reporting.

“I’m excited to have such a promising group of fellows for the third year of our health reporting fellowship program. The training and guidance our fellows receive through the program provide an important base for filling a key need to have more women covering the health beat. I am thrilled that JAWS can help fill such a need at a critical time," said JAWS president Angela Greiling Keane.

“Covering health issues through an evidence-based, scientific lens is more important than ever. Training journalists to do so effectively can make a real impact in their communities, especially on topics that may not get much attention,” said veteran health journalist Liz Seegert, who will direct the program.

2025 Health Journalism Fellows

  • Nik Altenberg

    Project: Investigating health harms of pesticides in Watsonville, CA, community, particularly farmworkers and children.

    Nik Altenberg is a journalist based in Oakland, Calif. She works as a copy editor and fact checker for Santa Cruz Local and as an on-call reporter for KQED. Her reporting interests include policing and incarceration; environmental inequality; housing and homelessness; immigration and border policy; public health; aging and care; and the places where these issues intersect.

  • Taylor Blatchford

    Project: Exploring the complex question of mental health crisis response through the lens of two key groups of people: dispatchers for 911 and 988, and teams of mental health professionals that respond to people in crisis.

    Taylor Blatchford is an engagement reporter covering mental health at The Seattle Times. She was previously a member of The Seattle Times’ investigative team, where her reporting exposed shortcomings in the state’s collection of money owed to wage theft victims. She holds a master’s degree in journalism education from Kent State University and a bachelor’s degree in investigative journalism from the University of Missouri. Her work has been recognized by Investigative Reporters and Editors, the Society for Features Journalism and the Washington Coalition for Open Government.

  • Emily Brindley

    Project: Looking at communities that do not have access to maternity services, focusing on hospitals that have closed their labor and delivery departments.

    Emily Brindley reports on health in the state of Texas at The Dallas Morning News. She was previously an investigative reporter at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. Before moving to Texas in 2021, she covered the coronavirus pandemic at the Hartford Courant in Connecticut. Outside of journalism, you can find Emily hiking, baking or waxing poetic about The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City.


  • Julia Metraux

    Project: Shedding light on how biases about disability and pregnancy shape the treatment of disabled pregnant patients.

    Julia Métraux is Mother Jones' first disability reporter, and she covers how disability and chronic illness overlaps with politics. For her JAWS fellowship, Métraux is excited to dive into how disabled people who are or want to get pregnant are treated, including an examination of persisting sterilization policies. Métraux's work is shaped by her own lived experience with chronic illness and disability. 

  • Jasmin Orozco Rodriguez

    Project: Investigating whether Native Americans were disproportionately affected during the Medicaid unwinding in California, Arizona, Alaska, Oklahoma, and Montana.

    Jazmin Orozco Rodriguez is a rural health correspondent for KFF Health News based in Elko, Nevada. Her project will focus on how the Medicaid redetermination process affected Native Americans. Tribal health leaders reported a host of issues, including lack of data and communication from state health agencies, as states terminated coverage for ineligible beneficiaries last year following the end of the covid-19 public health emergency.

  • Kena Shah

    Project: Reporting on how Canadian health care is unexpectedly lagging behind its American counterpart when it comes to providing care for female genital mutilation survivors.

    Kena Shah is an independent Canadian journalist reporting on human rights, gender-based violence, and healthcare. Her reporting on female genital mutilation in Canada has been recognized by the Amnesty International Canada Media Award. Kena is a former software engineer and holds an undergraduate degree in computer engineering.

  • Natalie Skowlund

    Project: Producing a pocast series on health disparities in Colorado’s Latino community.

    Natalie Skowlund is an award-winning bilingual journalist focused on in-depth storytelling around human rights, gender and health issues. She previously held positions at NPR-affiliate KUNC and the Grants Pass Daily Courier, and received a master’s degree from Arizona State University’s Walter Cronkite School of Journalism. Her work has been recognized by the Indigenous Journalists Association, Association of Health Care Journalists, and Society of Professional Journalists, among others. She is also a former Fulbright scholar.

  • Shernay Williams

    Project: Exploring breast cancer trends in Black women, in particular the mortality gap and genetic predisposition to the disease.

    Shernay Williams is an independent TV and video journalist. She started her career as a local newspaper and TV reporter/anchor, covering everything from mayoral races to the heroin epidemic. During a break from journalism, she launched a content strategy firm, directory of Black mom-owned businesses and national database of free small business resources. Shernay currently produces health and consumer reports for Ivanhoe Broadcast News and community stories for ABC27 in Harrisburg, PA.

Fellow Bylines

200 survivors of sexual assault, gender-based violence sign letter condemning a second Trump term

11/4/24 – Elizabeth Moss – AfroLA

As Parkinson’s cases rise, clinical trial volunteers hope to help future patients

10/24/24 – Eleanore Catolico – New York & Michigan Solutions Journalism Collaborative

Lingering fears over past immigration policies are fueling a reluctance to enroll in Medi-Cal

9/25/24 – Jasmine Aguilera –  El Tímpano

Birth control has become harder to get. New York has some creative solutions

9/4/24 –  Anika Nayak – STAT

Chronic illegal dumping highlights health concerns in the Rockaways

8/29/24 – Roxanne Scott – Amsterdam News

How a decades-old domestic violence policy deters Blacks and Latines from seeking medical care

8/15/24 – Elizabeth Moss – AfroLA

These laws seek to simplify the wheelchair repair process in Wisconsin. How do they work?

8/8/24 – Tamia Fowlkes – Milwaukee Journal Sentinel


She waited over a year to get her wheelchair. In Wisconsin and elsewhere, that's typical.

8/8/24 – Tamia Fowlkes – Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

In the Texas Panhandle, nurses make home visits to new moms in need

7/25/24 – Jayme Lozano Carver – Texas Tribune

Amid a dementia crisis, brain researchers try to recruit Black Americans

7/11/24 – Eleanore Catolico – New York & Michigan Solutions Journalism Collaborative


As a Texas city debates an abortion travel ban, maternal care is scarce in nearby rural counties

6/14/24 — Jayme Lozano Carver — Texas Tribune

A climate change forecast: rain with a chance of mosquito-borne diseases

4/25/24 — Roxanne Scott — Black to Nature

Pennsylvania law to improve sexual assault aftercare landscape remains unfunded

4/10/24 — Sammy Caiola — Kensington Voice

‘Who falls through the cracks?’: Philly’s sexual assault exam system creates barriers for survivors, skirts state rules

4/05/24 — Sammy Caiola — Kensington Voice

California’s expanded health coverage for undocumented immigrants collides with Medicaid checks

3/21/24 — Jasmine Aguilera — El Tímpano

The History That Explains Today’s Shortage of Black Midwives

2/29/24 — Anika Nayak — Time

WA Mental health providers say insurance reimbursement is not enough

12/21/23 - Michelle Baruchman – Seattle Times

What recovery?

12/20/23 - Lygia Navarro - palabra.

University Students Across Chicago Influence Schools To Stock Period Products

12/1/23 - Annabel Rocha - IL Latino News

ENDANGERED: Black doulas fight ‘staggering’ maternal mortality crisis

11/2/23 - Dana James – Black Iowa News

Doctors created a primary care clinic as their former hospital struggled

10/31/23 - Cecilia Nowell - CBS News

ENDANGERED: Hospital systems ‘don’t take our pain seriously,’ say Black Iowans

10/17/23 - Dana James – Black Iowa News

ENDANGERED: Racism in Maternity Care

10/10/23 - Dana James – Black Iowa News

How insurance companies fill their networks with “ghost” therapists

10/3/23 - Michelle Baruchman – Seattle Times

What Access To Period Products Looks Like In Some Schools

9/26/23 - Annabel Rocha - IL Latino News

Families fall deep in debt for mental health care. Why is insurance so spotty?

8/6/23 - Michelle Baruchman – Seattle Times

Tips to navigate insurance denials for mental health conditions

8/6/23 - Michelle Baruchman – Seattle Times

Doctors created a primary care clinic as their former hospital struggled 

7/21/23 - Cecilia Nowell - KFF Health News