As a London-based freelance journalist, writer, and healthcare strategist, I specialize in what happens at the intersections of healthcare—where pharmaceutical innovation meets clinical practice, where medical technology encounters community needs, and where academic research aligns with lived experience. I'm especially interested in how these intersections play out across geographic borders to ensure innovations reach the patients who need them most.
For nearly two decades, I navigated the U.S. healthcare system from multiple vantage points: as a staff attorney with the National Health Law Program, a bioethics policy analyst on assisted reproductive technologies at the Center for Genetics and Society, a risk management and patient safety expert, and an advocate for healthcare professionals. Now based in the U.K., I write on healthcare issues and advocate for improvements to maternal and reproductive care.
My expertise lies in communication—through writing, policy analysis, public speaking, and facilitating consensus among diverse healthcare stakeholders to drive sustainable improvements in care delivery and outcomes.
I have a forthcoming memoir due out in late 2026 and continue to consult for healthcare organizations.
I hold a J.D. from American University Washington College of Law and an undergraduate degree in English and Policy Studies from Rice University.
Throughout my life, I've delighted in capturing and sharing stories. I am an avid runner, mother of three fierce children, and wife of a proud, progressive, supportive husband. I find my bliss in storytelling and cutting a rug on someone's dance floor.