
Diane Webber
Diane Webber is a supervising editor on NPR's Science Desk, specializing in health policy. She edits stories on reproductive health, mental health, Medicare, Medicaid, health insurance and caregiving, among other topics.
Prior to joining NPR in 2022, Webber spent 11 years as an editor at KFF Health News, a nonprofit health policy newsroom where she led a team of reporters covering implementation of the Affordable Care Act in partnership with NPR and member stations. She also edited the Bill of the Month series, another collaboration between NPR and KFF Health News, that sparked federal legislation known as the No Surprises Act in 2020.
Earlier in her career, Webber was the founding editor of Politico Pro Health Care, and an executive editor of classroom magazines at Scholastic. She wrote five nonfiction science and health books for middle schoolers, published by Scholastic.
Webber got her start in journalism at community newspapers in Brooklyn and Lower Manhattan. She also did a short stint on the New York Post's copy desk.
Webber grew up in Fayetteville, North Carolina, in a military family. She graduated from Barnard College, where she majored in philosophy and minored in dance. She is married to journalist Glenn Thrush, and they have two sons and a Jack Russell terrier. [Copyright 2025 NPR]
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The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention updated the numbers of measles cases in the country on Friday. Here's what they say and what it means for public health in the U.S.
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The reduction in force comes along with a reorganization of the Department of Health and Human Services, consolidating 28 divisions to 15.
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President Trump campaigned on lowering the cost of IVF, after a controversial ruling made the treatment stop in Alabama for a short time.