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Patricia Thomas |
An award-winning author, journalist and editor has been named the
first holder of the Knight Chair in Health and Medical Journalism
at UGA, responsible for a major outreach project aimed at improving
the flow of public health news in the impoverished South.
Patricia Thomas, who has written about medicine, public health and
life science research for more than 30 years, has agreed to
join the Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication in August.
“We’re delighted that Pat Thomas will be the first holder
of this important position,” says John Soloski, dean of the
college. “Her background and interest in public health communication
is without equal. Her presence will no doubt bolster Grady’s
already strong health communication program and further cement the
university’s commitment to improving public health.”
From 1991 to 1997, Thomas was the first non--physician to serve
as editor of the “Harvard Health Letter,” the oldest
consumer health newsletter in the country. She has been a Knight
Science Journalism Fellow at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
and in 1998 was awarded the Leonard Silk Journalism Fellowship for
her book Big Shot: Passion, Politics and the Struggle for an
AIDS Vaccine, a work-in-progress at the time. She was also
among the first healthy volunteers to be injected with an experimental
DNA vaccine for AIDS, in a study at the National Institutes of Health.
Thomas won the 2002 Deterling Award of Distinction from the New
England chapter of the American Medical Writers Association. During
the 2002–03 academic year, she was a visiting scholar at Boston
University’s Knight Center for Science and Medical Journalism.
While there, she taught graduate students and wrote The Anthrax
Attacks, the first systematic analysis of news management and
reporting during the 2001 anthrax attacks. She also wrote an essay
for The War on Our Freedoms: Civil Liberties in an Age of Terrorism
that explored how the Patriot Act and related legislation has damaged
scientific efforts to understand and conquer some of the world’s
leading causes of death.
Thomas has a bachelor’s degree in English from the University
of California at Berkeley and a master’s in communication
from Stanford University. Her work appears regularly in Harvard
Magazine, where she is a contributing editor. In addition, she is
a research fellow for the Albert B. Sabin Vaccine Institute and
advisor to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Knight
Science Journalism Fellowship.
At UGA, Thomas will develop and teach undergraduate and master’s
courses in health and medical journalism and create an outreach
program aimed at improving the flow of health news to the Southern
Black Belt, a rural strip of hundreds of counties winding through
11 states.
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