#NSWASCIWIRE
Recent work by our members#nswasciwire highlights the published writing of NSWA members each month. Would you like to see your writing featured? Please suggest an item online or send a link or PDF file to Susan Keown at sciencewire@nwscience.org. The NSWA Board of Directors determines what material to present. We look forward to highlighting your work.
Kuwana: Hot Summer at Children’s
Science Day to staff hires—Ellen Kuwana covers it all for Seattle Children’s Center for Clinical and Translational Research. In the June issue of the Center’s newsletter (link downloads a pdf), Ellen introduces us to its exceptional providers and staff, including the...
Snow Landa: Just in Time for August
Amy Snow Landa is an expert health writer and communicator (see @amylanda and her Seattle Times “Healthcare Checkup” archive). Amy recently joined The Fearey Group, a Northwest public relations and public affairs firm. She also makes a mean bruschetta. The photo in...
Stiffler: ACA Report Card
We’re seven months in, writes Lisa Stiffler @lisa_stiffler, so how’s Washington State dealing with the Affordable Care Act? Lisa gives us a full report in the Seattle Times, from the good news about primary care visits and wait times to the bad about the crisis in...
Pinto-Santini: NextGen Biomed Researchers
Back-to-school is around the corner so Delia Pinto-Santini shows us just what our local kids can do. Delia ran the for the Northwest Association for Biomedical Research. Students cheap articles from around Washington State wrote for NWABR about how science affected...
Fernando Gonzalez: Making the Most of 140
Ivan Fernando Gonzalez is a master of the 140-character genre with bilingual tweets about science in Seattle and around the globe. He and @moefeliu wrote in Scientific American about . @GonzalezIvanF follows the flight of his tweets and packages his top topics. Want...