Joanne Silberner
Joanne Silberner is a health policy correspondent for National Public Radio. She covers medicine, health reform, and changes in the health care marketplace.
Silberner has been with NPR since 1992. Prior to that she spent five years covering consumer health and medical research at U.S. News & World Report. In addition she has worked at Science News magazine, Science Digest, and has freelanced for various publications. She has been published in The Washington Post, Health, USA Today, American Health, Practical Horseman, Encyclopedia Britannica, and others.
She was a fellow for a year at the Harvard School of Public Health, and from 1997-1998, she had a Kaiser Family Foundation media fellowship. During that fellowship she chronicled the closing of a state mental hospital. Silberner also had a fellowship to study the survivors of the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Silberner has won awards for her work from the Society of Professional Journalists, the New York State Mental Health Association, the March of Dimes, Easter Seals, the American Heart Association, and others. Her work has also earned her a Unity Award and a Clarion Award.
A graduate of Johns Hopkins University, Silberner holds her B.A. in biology. She has a master's degree in journalism from Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism.
She currently resides in Washington, D.C.
- Remembering Dr. Richard Cash: How a 'simple' intervention helped save millions of lives
- Remembering Joel Breman, Ebola pioneer and beloved global health mentor
- What survivors of trauma have taught this eminent psychiatrist about hope
- Whatever happened to fly-in medical missions that got kayoed by the pandemic?
- Studying the link between the gut and mental health is personal for this scientist
- What's the origin of the long-ago Swahili civilization? Genes offer a revealing answer
- In memoriam: Female trailblazers who leapt over barriers to fight for their sisters
- The death rate for children has dropped dramatically. Yet there's cause for alarm