Pien Huang
Pien Huang is a health reporter on the Science desk. She was NPR's first Reflect America Fellow, working with shows, desks and podcasts to bring more diverse voices to air and online.
She's a former producer for WBUR/NPR's On Point and was a 2018 Environmental Reporting Fellow with The GroundTruth Project at WCAI in Cape Cod, covering the human impact on climate change. As a freelance audio and digital reporter, Huang's stories on the environment, arts and culture have been featured on NPR, the BBC and PRI's The World.
Huang's experiences span categories and continents. She was executive producer of Data Made to Matter, a podcast from the MIT Sloan School of Management, and was also an adjunct instructor in podcasting and audio journalism at Northeastern University. She worked as a project manager for public artist Ralph Helmick to help plan and execute The Founder's Memorial in Abu Dhabi and with Stoltze Design to tell visual stories through graphic design. Huang has traveled with scientists looking for signs of environmental change in Cameroon's frogs, in Panama's plants and in the ocean water off the ice edge of Antarctica. She has a degree in environmental science and public policy from Harvard.
- U.S. passengers flying from Ebola-affected countries rerouted
- RFK Jr. fires two leaders of preventive health panel
- How the Ebola outbreak of 2014 was brought under control
- This Ebola outbreak raises questions about when it all began — and the U.S. response
- Hantavirus countdown: U.S. cruise passengers settle in for 42 days of waiting
- 18 passengers return to U.S. after weeks on cruise ship hit with hantavirus outbreak
- U.S. cruise passengers arrive in the U.S. after one tests positive for hantavirus
- Can Trump's latest pick for surgeon general make it through confirmation?