Elizabeth Cohen

Elizabeth Cohen
Born Elizabeth Sondra Schwartz
Nationality American
Alma mater Columbia University
Boston University
Spouse(s) Tal Cohen
Children 4
Parent(s) Sheila Fay Gopen Schwartz
Charles A. Schwartz

Elizabeth Cohen is an American television news journalist for CNN. She is the channel's senior medical correspondent and appears on various programs.

Early life

She was born Elizabeth Sondra Schwartz to a Jewish family, the daughter of Sheila Fay (nee Gopen) and Charles A. "Chuck" Schwartz.[1][2] Both her parent's were physicians.[3] She has two sisters and a brother: Pamela Fay Cohen; David Ansin Schwartz; and Julia Molly Healy.[1]

Cohen attended Columbia College, where she graduated with a bachelor's degree in history. She went on to earn a master's degree in public health from Boston University. She has received outstanding alumna awards from both colleges.[4]

Career

Cohen worked at WLVI in Boston as associate producer of environmental program Green Watch. She also worked as a reporter for States News Service in Washington, DC and for The Times Union in Albany, New York.[4]

Cohen joined CNN in 1991. She focuses on health-related issues and has reported from a medical angle on major news stories like the Gulf oil spill, the 2010 Haiti earthquake and Hurricane Katrina.[4] She is currently senior medical correspondent for CNN's Health, Medical and Wellness unit.[4]

Awards

Cohen won a Hearst Award during her time at The Times Union. She won a Sigma Delta Chi Award from the Society of Professional Journalists and a National Headliner Award for the feature “A Lesson Before Dying” in 2006. She was honored by the Newswomen's Club of New York, the New York Association of Black Journalists for the feature African-Americans and Bone Marrow Transplants and the Mental Health America Media Awards in 2007 for her reporting work. She won a Gracie Award in 2008 for the feature "Where’s Molly?".[4]

She contributed to CNN's Emmy Award-winning coverage of Hurricane Katrina and the September 11 attacks.[4]

Works

She published a book titled The Empowered Patient in 2010.[5]

Personal life

She is married to Israeli-born entrepreneur, Tal Cohen; they have four daughters.[6]

References

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