73 online
 
Most Popular Choices
Become a Premium Member Would you like to know how many people have visited this page? Or how reputable the author is? Simply sign up for a Advocate premium membership and you'll automatically see this data on every article. Plus a lot more, too.


She can be reached at trudy.lieberman@gmail.com and can be followed on Twitter at trudy_lieberman.
SHARE More Sharing

Trudy Lieberman

Facebook page url on login Profile not filled in       Twitter page url on login Profile not filled in       Linkedin page url on login Profile not filled in       Instagram page url on login Profile not filled in

                 

Volunteer a little time and make a big difference

I have 5 fans:
Become a Fan
Become a Fan.
You'll get emails whenever I post articles on OpEd News

Trudy Lieberman, a journalist for more than 40 years, is a contributing editor to the Columbia Journalism Review where she blogs about health care and retirement at www.cjr.org. Her blogposts are at http://www.cjr.org/author/trudy-lieberman-1/ She is also a fellow at the Center for Advancing Health where she blogs about health at http://www.preparedpatientforum.org/.   Her blog posts are at http://blog.preparedpatientforum.org/blog/category/author/trudy-lieberman/   Lieberman has had a long career at Consumer Reports specializing in insurance, health care and health care financing.   She was also the director of the Center for Consumer Health Choices at Consumers Union.   She is a contributor to The Nation, and has written a column about health and the marketplace for the Los Angeles Times.   Lieberman began her career as a consumer writer for the Detroit Free Press where her reporting became a model for consumer writers across the country.

She has won 26 national and regional reporting awards and other honors, including two National Magazine Awards, 10 National Press Club Awards, five Society of Professional Journalists Deadline Club Awards, a John J. McCloy Fellowship to study health care in Germany, a Joan Shorenstein Fellowship from Harvard University to study media coverage of medical technology, an honorary doctorate of humane letters from the University of Nebraska, and two Fulbright Fellowships---a senior scholar award to study health care in Japan and a senior specialist award to participate in training conferences in the United Kingdom for European health journalists.   She is the author of five books including Slanting the Story the Forces That Shape the News and the Consumer Reports Guide to Health Services for Seniors, which was named by Library Journal as one of the best consumer health books for 2000.

Lieberman is an adjunct associate professor of public health at City University of New York where she teaches courses on the media's influence on public health.   She was director of the health and medical reporting program at the Graduate School of Journalism, City University of New York, has taught media ethics in the Science, Health and Environmental Reporting Program at New York University, and has been an adjunct professor of journalism at Columbia University.   In 2006, she was a Beamer-Schneider SAGES Fellow at Case Western Reserve University where she taught courses on media ethics and the ethics of health care delivery.   In 2007, she was appointed the James H. Ottaway visiting journalism professor at SUNY New Paltz where she taught a course on the media and the marketplace.   In 2011, Lieberman was named the Soderlund Visiting Professor in the College of Journalism and Mass Communication at the University of Nebraska where she taught public affairs reporting.

Lieberman served five years as the president of the Association of Health Care Journalists, a professional organization of over 1300 journalists who cover health and medicine, and continues to serve on the board of directors as immediate past president.   She is currently a national advisory council member of the California Health Benefits Review Program.   She has served on the board of directors for the National Committee for Quality Assurance, the Medicare Rights Center, and Village Care of New York.   Lieberman appears on many panels and lectures widely on health care in the U.S.   She holds a B.S. with distinction from the University of Nebraska and earned a certificate in business and economics journalism from Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism where she was a Knight-Bagehot Fellow in 1976-77.

She can be reached at trudy.lieberman@gmail.com and can be followed on Twitter at trudy_lieberman.

OpEd News Member for 639 week(s) and 3 day(s)

44 Articles, 0 Quick Links, 0 Comments, 0 Diaries, 0 Polls

Articles Listed By Date
List By Popularity
Search Title   
Date Between and

Page 3 of 3    First  Last   Back  Next     View All

(4 comments) SHARE More Sharing        Sunday, April 22, 2012
How the Media Has Shaped the Social Security Debate -- The Press Plays a Dubious Role Social Security is an issue that, according to six decades of Gallup polls enjoys some 70 percent of the public support. Many opinion makers, politicians and policy gurus, contend that this most basic of retirement programs is in grave danger, and the media has too often reported misleading or flat-out wrong "facts," giving the public only one side of the story.
(2 comments) SHARE More Sharing        Sunday, February 19, 2012
The Case of the Missing Health Insurance Premium the Affordable Care Act requires health insurance companies to be more transparent when offering health insurance policies. Unfortunately, Health and Human Services has decided not to require them to include the cost of premiums, without which comparison shopping for benefits versus cost requires considerable due diligence and research savvy on the part of the consumer. The media seems not to have noticed this shortcoming.
(2 comments) SHARE More Sharing        Wednesday, February 8, 2012
USA Today Touts the Government's Good News on Medicare-- But was it the full story? We might be able to excuse the administration's inclination to put the best spin on the non-controversial aspects of the health reform law as part of its campaign talking points. But we can't excuse journalists for not looking beyond the stuff they are being fed.
(1 comments) SHARE More Sharing        Sunday, February 5, 2012
Jon Stewart Takes on Sebelius - What Madame Secretary didn't say Trudy Lieberman covers the healthcare reform beat for The Columbia Journalism Review and often takes the mainstream media to task for its failure to adequately inform the public on this very important issue. In this column she gives credit where credit is due: To Jon Stewart for asking HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius some tough questions about The Affordable Care Act (sometimes referred to as "Obamcare")

Page 3 of 3    First  Last   Back  Next     View All

Tell A Friend