Julie Corliss

Julie Corliss is a medical writer with more than sixteen years of experience in consumer health issues. Her work has been published in Newsweek, HealthNews, and Harvard Health Publications. Recently she helped Dr. George L. Blackburn write Break Through Your Set Point a weight loss book published by HarperCollins.[1]

Julie Corliss

Biography

After receiving a BA in biology at Oberlin College, she worked for several years as a research assistant for Dr. William E. Connor, an internationally known expert on the health benefits of fish oil. She obtained a master's certificate in science communication at the University of California, Santa Cruz, then worked as a writer and public affairs specialist at the National Cancer Institute, the US Department of Agriculture, and the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.

For eight years, she was a staff medical writer for HealthNews, a consumer health publication affiliated with the New England Journal of Medicine. Since 1993, she has done freelance medical writing for a variety of publications, including Newsweek, Howard Hughes Medical Institute Bulletin, CURE (Cancer Updates, Research, and Education), and Harvard Women's Health Watch.

She currently works as a senior medical editor for Harvard Health Publications.

Her father is scientist Jack Corliss.

Selected publications

Newsweek

  • Brain Check, cover story on Mind-Body Medicine (co-authored with Herbert Benson, MD, and Geoffrey Cowley), 9/04

Harvard Health Publications

  • Weight Less, Live Longer: Strategies for successful weigh loss (2006)
  • Hands: Strategies for strong, pain-free hands (2005)
  • Celiac disease: When the body goes against the grains (7/06)
  • Nitroglycerin: A blast from the past remains a trusted standby (7/05)

Health News

  • Food Irradiation: A Recipe for Safer Food? (6/04)
  • "Vegging Out" for Better Health? (11/03)
  • Low-Carb Diet Lowdown (7/03)
  • Space for Women: Perspectives on Careers in Science (Booklet) (1995)

References

  1. "Break Through Your Set Point". Archived from the original on 2009-08-27. Retrieved 2020-02-10.
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