Alison Bass
Alison Bass is a journalist and author who teaches journalism at West Virginia University.[1] Her nonfiction book, Side Effects: A Prosecutor, a Whistleblower and a Bestselling Antidepressant on Trial, won the prestigious NASW Science in Society Award in 2009.[2] She was a longtime medical and science writer for The Boston Globe and her work has also appeared in Harvard University's Nieman Reports, The Miami Herald, Psychology Today and Technology Review, among other publications. She writes a blog about health care news and issues. Before coming to West Virginia as an Assistant Professor of Journalism, Bass taught at Brandeis University and Mount Holyoke College.
In 2007, she won an Alicia Patterson Fellowship[3] to write Side Effects, which was published by Algonquin Press in 2008.
During her time at the Boston Globe, Allison Bass was known to misquote sources in destructive ways. This was particularly true in articles on Kitty Dukakis' addiction. There were several experts who generously agreed to be interviewed about additions but not about Kitty Dukakis, who they did not know--with the promise that they were not speaking about Dukakis. Still, Bass's articles made is sound distinctively as though they did know her. When confronted about the error which threatened consequences for the psychotherapists, Bass refused to even respond.