Journalism
Immersive storytelling with heart, rigor, and nuance
Features, Essays, & Health Reporting
The previous super didn’t live in the building full-time, but Mr. Couverthier knew he didn’t only want a full-time job, he wanted to build a home.
A harried super at a five-building co-op in Westchester County carves out some time in the morning to return to his easel and oil paints.
One in three heart patients live with anxiety, depression, and ongoing stress, according to a 2023 meta-analysis of over 100 studies.
Drugs that instantly relieve anxiety can feel like a godsend, but using the pills long-term may come with serious consequences.
It's a job that can take a toll on workers. Roughly 21% of home health care workers report poor mental health, according to a survey of close to 3,000 workers published in the American Journal of Public Health in 2021.
Serving what he calls the “most unique congregation on Earth,” he caters to the “spiritual and personal needs of all those who travel down the road without a ZIP Code.”
Slick flexible working spaces are everywhere, but faith organizations offer a more basic service – with some unconventional benefits
In our cultural imagination a preacher is male and his wife is in the front row. Rev Nichelle Guidry is working to change this picture.
To transform treatment outcomes for the Latinx community, approaching care with a sociocultural lens may help.
We live in a time when “resting bitch face” is a joke, selfies are constant, and activist art implores us to stop telling women to smile: But the conversation still largely excludes people who don’t always have control of theirs: people with a flattened affect.
Audio Journalism
If you notice that your needs aren't being met or that your boundaries aren't respected in your relationships, these connections may have grown codependent. Journalist Gina Ryder explains how to spot signs of codependency in your relationships and how to forge stronger, reciprocal bonds.
Listen via Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and NPR Podcast app.
More than half of the tenants in a prewar co-op in Chelsea are seniors. Rosalind Hernandez, the super, is especially close to one tenant who is 98.
Even in an expensive city that breeds unusual living arrangements, this is not your average New York roommate situation.
The right support group can help cancer patients and their loved ones navigate the emotional uproar of a diagnosis and all that comes with it.