Seema Yasmin
British writer and medical doctor
Seema Yasmin
McGovern Lecture 2016
Born Alma mater Scientific career Institutions
Seema Yasmin is a British-American physician, writer and science communicator based at Stanford University . She is Director of Research and Education at the Stanford Health Communication Initiative.[ 1] During the COVID-19 pandemic , Yasmin helped to debunk myths about the coronavirus .
Education and early career
Yasmin was born in Nuneaton, Warwickshire , England and raised in London to a family of Indian and Burmese ancestry.[ 2] [ 3] [ 4] Her mother, Yasmin Halima, was born in India and is a Distinguished Careers Institute fellow who works on women's health .[ 5] At the age of seventeen, Yasmin decided that she wanted to take her mother's first name as her surname, and had her name changed with a lawyer.[ 5] Yasmin trained in biochemistry at Queen Mary University of London and graduated in 2005.[ 6] She moved to the University of Cambridge to complete a graduate programme in medicine.[ 7] She started her medical career in the National Health Service , working at Homerton University Hospital for one year. In 2010 Yasmin was awarded a University of California, Los Angeles fellowship to train in clinical research in Botswana .[ 8] She moved to the United States with her mother.[ 5] In 2011, Yasmin joined the Epidemic Intelligence Service [ 9] as a "disease detective" at the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention , where she studied outbreaks of disease in prisons, border towns and American Indian reservations.[ 10] Whilst studying an outbreak of flesh-eating bacteria on the Navajo Nation , Yasmin realised the power of effective science communication , and realised that she wanted to use journalism to shift public policy.[ 5]
Career
In 2013 Yasmin was made a Dalla Lana Global Journalism Fellow at the University of Toronto .[ 11] Here she focussed on telling the stories of epidemics in an effort to encourage others to learn from tragedy.[ 12] Soon after completing her fellowship, Yasmin joined The Dallas Morning News as a reporter.[ 7] [ 13] Her work there included coverage of the Ebola crisis in Dallas and the epidemic of gun violence in the US.[ 14] [ 15] She was a medical analyst for CNN , and had a weekly medical segment on television news partner NBC 5 DFW .[ 7] She held a simultaneous position as Professor of Public Health at the University of Texas at Dallas .[ 16] [ 8] Yasmin delivered the 2016 University of Texas at Austin McGovern Lecture, where she discussed the lessons she had learned reporting from public health emergencies.[ 17]
Yasmin joined Stanford University as a John S. Knight Fellow in 2017. There she investigated the spread of misinformation and pseudoscience during epidemics.[ 18] As part of this fellowship, Yasmin started working with Wired to debunk pseudoscience and misinformation on YouTube . She delivered a talk at the TEDx OakLawn event in 2018. In 2019 Yasmin was appointed as Director of the Stanford University Health Communication Initiative.[ 5]
During the COVID-19 pandemic , Yasmin used social media, podcasts,[ 19] and popular science articles to better inform the public about the coronavirus disease .[ 20] [ 21] [ 22] She is also interested in the "spread of myths and hoaxes and rumors and outright lies about vaccines".[ 23] Yasmin became one of the most trusted public health experts on social media.[ 24] She used webinars to teach students about how to report responsibly on medical emergencies.[ 25] [ 26] In an interview with Bumble , Yasmin explained how to date during the pandemic.[ 27] A collection of her essays on health and medical misinformation from her newspaper column “Debunked” was published in 2021 as Viral BS : medical myths and why we fall for them .[ 28]
Her second book, Muslim Women Are Everything , started as a conversation on Twitter and ended as a six-figure book deal.[ 29]
Selected publications
Peer-reviewed scientific papers
Ngugi, E. N.; Roth, E.; Mastin, Theresa; Nderitu, M. G.; Yasmin, Seema (1 September 2012). "Female sex workers in Africa: Epidemiology overview, data gaps, ways forward" . SAHARA-J: Journal of Social Aspects of HIV/AIDS . 9 (3): 148–153. doi :10.1080/17290376.2012.743825 . ISSN 1729-0376 . PMC 4560463 . PMID 23237069 . [ 30]
Regan, Joanna J.; Traeger, Marc S.; Humpherys, Dwight; Mahoney, Dianna L.; Martinez, Michelle; Emerson, Ginny L.; Tack, Danielle M.; Geissler, Aimee; Yasmin, Seema; Lawson, Regina; Williams, Velda (1 June 2015). "Risk Factors for Fatal Outcome From Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever in a Highly Endemic Area—Arizona, 2002–2011" . Clinical Infectious Diseases . 60 (11): 1659–1666. doi :10.1093/cid/civ116 . ISSN 1058-4838 . PMC 4706357 . PMID 25697742 . [ 31]
Selected works
Awards and honours
References
^ a b "Seema Yasmin" . John S. Knight Journalism Fellowships at Stanford . Retrieved 1 November 2018 .
^ @DoctorYasmin (4 July 2020). "And George Eliot. Since I was born in Nuneaton and still haven't read Middlemarch" (Tweet ) – via Twitter .
^ "Former Dallas journalist's tweet-turned-essay on 'Muslim women do things' earns six-figure book deal" . The Dallas Morning News . 16 May 2019. Archived from the original on 18 May 2019. Retrieved 30 May 2021 .
^ Yasmin, Seema (2020). Viral BS: Medical Myths and Why We Fall for Them . Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 3. ISBN 978-1-4214-4040-8 .
^ a b c d e "Q&A: mother and daughter Yasmin Halima and Seema Yasmin" . The Stanford Daily . 30 January 2019. Retrieved 11 May 2020 .
^ "Cambridge health specialist joins The Dallas Morning News" . Southern Newspaper Publishers Association . Retrieved 11 May 2020 .
^ a b c "Seema Yasmin | Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy" . munkschool.utoronto.ca . Retrieved 10 May 2020 .
^ a b "CNN medical analyst, Dallas Morning News reporter, Munk School graduate" . University of Toronto News . Retrieved 10 May 2020 .
^ Yasmin, Seema (29 February 2020). "The CDC's 'Disease Detectives' Are Our Front-Line Defense Against Coronavirus" . Rolling Stone . Retrieved 11 May 2020 .
^ "Seema Yasmin's Profile | Stanford Profiles" . profiles.stanford.edu . Retrieved 10 May 2020 .
^ "The Dalla Lana Fellowship in Global Journalism — at the Dalla Lana School of Public Health" . www.dlsph.utoronto.ca . Retrieved 10 May 2020 .
^ Laughery, Chris. "In The Moment ... For Every Epidemic, A Story: Seema Yasmin & Communicating About Disease" . listen.sdpb.org . Retrieved 10 May 2020 .
^ "Why a doctor joined the Dallas Morning News as a reporter" . Poynter . 21 July 2014. Retrieved 1 November 2018 .
^ "Brit 'Disease Detective' Helps Ebola-Hit Dallas" . Sky News . Retrieved 1 November 2018 .
^ "Ebola Survivors" . Pulitzer Center . 3 February 2016. Retrieved 10 May 2020 .
^ "Public Health Professor Brings CDC Experience, Expertise - News Center - The University of Texas at Dallas" . www.utdallas.edu . Retrieved 1 November 2018 .
^ "McGovern Lecture: From Ebola to Zika: Lessons learned from reporting on public health emergencies - Texas Today: UT Events & Announcements Calendar" . Texas Today: UT Events & Announcements Calendar . Retrieved 11 May 2020 .
^ "Seema Yasmin" . Center for Health Journalism . Retrieved 10 May 2020 .
^ Intercepted (22 April 2020). "Intercepted Podcast: Coronavirus and the Radical Religious Right's Bumbling Messiah" . The Intercept . Retrieved 11 May 2020 .
^ "Dr. Seema Yasmin Debunks Coronavirus Myths" . WIRED Videos . Retrieved 10 May 2020 .
^ "What's a Pandemic? Your Coronavirus Questions, Answered" . Wired . ISSN 1059-1028 . Retrieved 10 May 2020 .
^ "How Covid-19 immunity compares to other diseases | WIRED Middle East" . wired.me . 19 April 2020. Retrieved 11 May 2020 .
^ a b Ross, Martha. "Stanford doctor and author fights medical misinformation in time of COVID-19" . mercurynews.com . The Mercury News. Archived from the original on 10 August 2021. Retrieved 28 September 2021 .
^ "Who Are Your Trusted Sources on COVID-19?" . today.duke.edu . Retrieved 11 May 2020 .
^ "On-Demand Student Webinar: Responsible Reporting on Epidemics with Dr. Seema Yasmin" . Pulitzer Center . 8 April 2020. Retrieved 10 May 2020 .
^ MLive.com (3 February 2020). "Stanford doctor talks coronavirus, everything you need to know" . mlive . Retrieved 10 May 2020 .
^ "Bumble - How to Date During Coronavirus, According to an Epidemiologist" . Bumble . Retrieved 10 May 2020 .
^ a b Yasmin, Seema (2021). Viral BS : medical myths and why we fall for them . Baltimore. ISBN 978-1-4214-4040-8 . OCLC 1153340618 . {{cite book }}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link )
^ "Former Dallas journalist's tweet-turned-essay on 'Muslim women do things' earns six-figure book deal" . Dallas News . 16 May 2019. Retrieved 10 May 2020 .
^ Ngugi, E. N.; Roth, E.; Mastin, Theresa; Nderitu, M. G.; Yasmin, Seema (1 September 2012). "Female sex workers in Africa: Epidemiology overview, data gaps, ways forward" . SAHARA-J: Journal of Social Aspects of HIV/AIDS . 9 (3): 148–153. doi :10.1080/17290376.2012.743825 . ISSN 1729-0376 . PMC 4560463 . PMID 23237069 .
^ Regan, Joanna J.; Traeger, Marc S.; Humpherys, Dwight; Mahoney, Dianna L.; Martinez, Michelle; Emerson, Ginny L.; Tack, Danielle M.; Geissler, Aimee; Yasmin, Seema; Lawson, Regina; Williams, Velda (1 June 2015). "Risk Factors for Fatal Outcome From Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever in a Highly Endemic Area—Arizona, 2002–2011" . Clinical Infectious Diseases . 60 (11): 1659–1666. doi :10.1093/cid/civ116 . ISSN 1058-4838 . PMC 4706357 . PMID 25697742 .
^ Yasmin, Seema. (2018). Impatient Dr. Lange : One Man's Fight to End the Global HIV Epidemic . Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-1-4214-2662-4 . OCLC 1055272454 .
^ Joep Lange Institute (31 August 2018), Seema Yasmin introduces her book The Impatient Dr. Lange , retrieved 1 November 2018
^ "Seema Yasmin" . HarperCollins Publishers: World-Leading Book Publisher . Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 10 May 2020 . <ref>Yasmin, Seema; Azim, Fahmida (2020). Muslim women are everything : stereotype-shattering stories of courage, inspiration, and adventure . HARPERCOLLINS. ISBN 978-0-06-294703-1 . OCLC 1111254482 .
^ "Seema Yasmin" . HarperCollins Publishers: World-Leading Book Publisher . Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 10 May 2020 .
^ "From Liberia, Ebola Survivors Report They Are Still Afflicted with Disabling Symptoms" . Scientific American . Retrieved 11 May 2020 .
^ "Mayborn Literary Nonfiction Conference awards $18,000 in cash prizes in writing competitions" . UNT News . Retrieved 10 May 2020 .
^ "2016 Lone Star EMMY Nominations | National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences – Lone Star" . lonestaremmy.org . Retrieved 1 November 2018 .
^ parks, seema yasmin,scott friedman,eva (16 November 2015). "Hidden Threat: The Kissing Bug and Chagas disease" . interactives.dallasnews.com . Retrieved 10 May 2020 . {{cite web }}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link )
^ "Seema Yasmin GRANTEE" . pulitzercenter.org . Pulitzer Center. Archived from the original on 28 September 2021. Retrieved 28 September 2021 .
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