Courtenay Harris Bond

courtenay harris bond

Courtenay Harris Bond is the staff writer covering health for PhillyVoice. She enjoys writing about behavioral health, maternal health and inequities in the healthcare system, as well as human rights and criminal justice. A veteran daily newspaper reporter, Courtenay has also written for national outlets, including KFF Health News, Undark Magazine and Filter. She was a 2018 Rosalynn Carter Fellow for Mental Health Journalism and has master's degrees from Columbia Journalism School and the University of Pennsylvania's Graduate School of Education.

courtenay@phillyvoice.com

August 1, 2024

Parenting

This Philly parenting program teaches dads how to be better engaged in their children's lives

Focus on Fathers, a Philadelphia parenting program, helps dads develop and maintain positive, healthy involvement in their children's lives. It's part of a larger movement to promote men's emotional development and reduce domestic violence and absentee fatherhood.

July 31, 2024

Illness

Boar's Head recalls more meat products amid listeria outbreak

Boar's Head has expanded its recall of meat products connected to a listeria outbreak that has hospitalized 33 people in 13 states. Two people have died. The expanded recall includes 71 products with 'sell by' dates ranging from July 29 to Oct. 17.

July 30, 2024

Health News

Penn Medicine to open new proton therapy center in University City

Penn Medicine will open a fourth proton therapy center, expanding its ability to provide patients with the non-invasive cancer treatment that is associated with fewer side effects than other cancer treatments.

July 30, 2024

Health Stories

After seeing a high-speed, 3-car crash in Vermont, a Temple Hospital resident rushed to aid the people injured

Kiley Nygren, an emergency medicine resident at Temple University Hospital, triaged and cared for 14 people involved in a high-speed crash in Vermont on June 23, 2024. Nygren, and her fiance, Josh Koch, a resident at Einstein Medical Center, witnessed the crash while driving home from a wedding. They provided aid until first responders arrived. Twelve people survived.

July 25, 2024

Children's Health

The U.S. infant mortality rate has risen for the first time in 20 years, CDC says

The U.S. infant mortality rate increased for the first time in two decades in 2022, rising 3% from 2021, a new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows. New Jersey was among 12 states with an infant mortality rate that was lower than the national rate. Pennsylvania's was slightly higher.

July 24, 2024

Parenting

To help parents facing adversity nurture their children, a Delaware prof created a program now used by 10 countries

The ABC program created by University of Delaware professor Mary Dozier aims to help parents facing homelessness, poverty, addiction and other adversities learn to nurture their children, follow their children's leads and avoid frightening behaviors. The program is now used in 26 states and 10 countries.

July 24, 2024

Prevention

Mixed messages about mammograms can leave women confused about when to get them

Determining when to get a mammogram for the first time can be confusing for women due to conflicting messages from experts on breast cancer prevention. But a pair of breast cancer specialists from Philadelphia say the gold-standard guidelines come from the American College of Radiology and the American Society of Breast Surgeons. They recommend annual screenings beginning at age 40.

July 23, 2024

Mental Health

Montgomery County to open crisis center for people facing mental health and addiction emergencies

Montgomery County plans to open an $18 million crisis center that will respond to people experiencing mental health and addiction crises. The center also will help divert people who need behavioral health services away from the criminal justice system when it opens in 2025.

July 18, 2024

Addiction

LGBTQ people smoke cigarettes at higher rates, and they face barriers to quitting

LGBTQ people are more likely to smoke cigarettes than heterosexual and cisgender people, research shows. Tobacco companies have targeted them, and they face many barriers to quitting. If actions aren't taken, the LGBTQ community will have an influx of tobacco-related illnesses, Temple Health pulmonologist Dr. Jamie Garfield says.

July 18, 2024

Depression

Moving even once during childhood increases risk of being diagnosed with depression, study shows

Children who move at least once during childhood are at significantly higher risk of being diagnosed with depression later in life, a new study finds. Remaining settled during childhood in one place, even in a lower-income environment, may offer 'protective factors' against the mental health condition, the researchers concluded.

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