
Jason deBruyn
Supervising Editor for Digital NewsJason deBruyn is ¼ª²ÊÍøÍøÕ¾'s Supervising Editor for Digital News. In this role, he supervises digital news products and the news website.
Prior to this role, he was the ¼ª²ÊÍøÍøÕ¾ health reporter as well as the data reporter.
Prior to joining ¼ª²ÊÍøÍøÕ¾, Jason covered the business of health care and pharmaceuticals for Triangle Business Journal in Raleigh, an affiliate of the American City Business Journals network. His reporting roots trace to the Enquirer-Journal, a community newspaper in Monroe, North Carolina.
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"While FNS emergency payments are ending, the need is not," says NCDHHS's chief deputy secretary for opportunity and well-being.
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Two new hospitals in Wake County, including a new behavioral health hospital, received regulatory approval. When the dust settles on any appeals, it would mean one of the fastest expansions of new hospitals in the county's history.
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This is now the fifth report issued by the treasurer's office critical of hospital finances. Folwell has called the state's hospitals a "cartel," and accused them of driving up health care costs.
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Duplin County resident Evelyn Davis is one of many seniors across the state waiting for in-home support. Worker shortages mean she and others are stuck in a holding pattern.
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North Carolina saw record highs in opioid overdose hospitalizations and deaths in 2022.
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Lack of access to mental health care inside North Carolina's prisons has an increasing number of advocates worried about a looming crisis.
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The N.C. Treasurer's office rejected two appeals of its decision to award the State Health Plan's administration contract to Aetna.
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Companies announced 33 projects this year that will total $2.1 billion of investments and more than 2,700 new jobs in life sciences and related industries, according to a new report.
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North Carolina’s state auditor and the panel that disciplines physicians are at odds over a performance review of the state Medical Board.
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Serious flu and RSV cases have declined from a recent spike, but cases of COVID-19 are again on the rise and that continues to impact many people in North Carolina’s Triangle.