Event

A Discussion on HIV/AIDS and Ebola Reporting at Washington University Global Health Week

A Discussion on Emmy and Grimme Award-Winning HIV/AIDS and Ebola Reporting

Every Sunday, Mabel Musa attends church praying for her patients to stop dying from Ebola. Image by DOCDAYS Productions/Carl Gierstorfer. Liberia, 2015.

The documentary screening will be a part of 2018 Global Health Week at Washington University in St. Louis, organized by their Global Health Student Advisory Committee. Image by Washington University in St. Louis. United States, 2018.

The documentary screening will be a part of 2018 Global Health Week at Washington University in St. Louis, organized by their Global Health Student Advisory Committee. Image by Washington University in St. Louis. United States, 2018.

Wednesday, February 28, 2018 - 07:00pm to 09:00pm EST (GMT -0500)
Washington University in St. Louis
Graham Chapel
St. Louis, MO 63105
United States
RSVP Today

Filmmaker Carl Gierstorfer and Science magazine writer Jon Cohen explore their reporting on Ebola and HIV/AIDS during an evening program at Washington University in St. Louis on Wednesday, February 28, 2018. The event at Graham Chapel is part of Global Health Week 2018 and is the centerpiece of the journalists' multi-day visit to the University and to St. Louis-area schools.

Gierstorfer and Cohen plan to screen footage from their Pulitzer Center-supported reporting, discuss their stories and consider broader questions of global health journalism. Joining them for the discussion during the evening event are Jon Sawyer, Pulitzer Center executive director; Dr. Megan Baldridge, assistant professor of medicine at Washington University School of Medicine; and Jae Lee, candidate for MD 2021 at Washington University School of Medicine and a former Campus Consortium student fellow.

Gierstorfer is a biologist and filmmaker who has been following the Ebola outbreak in Liberia since 2014. There he filmed the documentary, "We Want You To Live—Liberia’s Fight Against Ebola," showing viewers how the disease affected the communities from the Liberian viewpoint. 

Cohen is a staff writer at Science magazine who has spent decades covering HIV/AIDS. In his project, "Ending AIDS," Cohen reported from Africa and North America, regions of the world racing to find a cure, or at least a solution to keep the epidemic under control. 

Click here for the full schedule for Washington University's Global Health Week 2018. Washington University in St. Louis is a Campus Consortium partner.