Status: Open
Organisation: Center for Health Journalism
Deadline: 09/04/2025
Location: U.S.-based professional journalists
The National Fellowship for Health and Social Well-being Reporting supports U.S.-based journalists in reporting on health, welfare, and well-being, particularly as it relates to children, families, and communities. This fellowship offers journalists the opportunity to step away from breaking news to focus on in-depth reporting projects that address social inequities and the lasting effects of systemic racism. Fellows will undergo a week of intensive learning in Los Angeles, followed by five months of professional mentorship.
Objectives
- Deeply investigate social and economic inequities in the U.S.
- Report on the lasting health effects of systemic racism and exclusion.
- Examine how environmental and community conditions influence health outcomes.
- Craft impactful projects that engage communities and lead to policy change.
Eligibility Criteria
- U.S.-based professional journalists, including those working in both large and small newsrooms, and freelancers with a confirmed assignment.
- Applicants should have at least three years of professional journalism experience.
- Freelancers must earn the majority of their income from journalism.
- Preference is given to applicants pursuing collaborative projects between mainstream and ethnic news outlets.
Reporting Themes We Support
- Child, youth, and family well-being
- Systemic racism and root causes of health inequities
- The school-to-prison pipeline as a health issue
- Maternal and infant health and intergenerational trauma
- Mental health of children and families
- How conditions in schools, communities, and the environment shape health
- Systemic barriers to health tied to race, poverty, and economic opportunity
- Healthcare and public health systems and inequitable outcomes
Deadline: April 9, 2025.
For more information and to apply, click here.