After COVID, health journalism got smarter and harder
By Pavithra in Media News on Wednesday, 13th May 2026 at 2:37pm
When COVID-19 overwhelmed India, health journalists suddenly found themselves at the centre of public life.
They were no longer simply reporting on hospitals, seasonal outbreaks, or government health schemes. They were decoding scientific studies, verifying WhatsApp rumours, tracking oxygen shortages, explaining vaccines, and translating rapidly changing medical information into language millions could understand.
In many ways, the pandemic permanently changed health reporting in Indian newsrooms.
Before COVID, health journalism was often treated as a specialised or secondary beat with limited newsroom attention. The pandemic pushed it into mainstream coverage, forcing journalists to balance speed, science, public anxiety, and misinformation all at once.
It also changed what audience...
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