Eilís O'Neill
Reporter
About
Eilís is a reporter covering health. She focuses on health inequities, substance use and addiction, infectious diseases, mental health, and reproductive and maternal health.
Eilís came to KUOW in 2016. Before that, she worked as a freelance reporter, first in South America, and then in New York City. Her work has aired on NPR’s Morning Edition and All Things Considered, APM’s Marketplace, Reveal from the Center for Investigative Reporting, and other programs.
Eilís' work as part of a team covering Covid-19 outbreaks and vaccine hesitation in Washington won a regional Murrow award, as did a series about children who lost parents to Covid-19. Her series about the opioid crisis on the Olympic Peninsula won several regional Society for Professional Journalists awards as well as a national Public Media Journalists Association award.
Eilís grew up in Seattle and was a high school intern at KUOW, in the program that later became RadioActive. She has a Master's in Science, Health, and Environment Reporting from Columbia University. She lives in Seattle with her husband and two children.
Location: Seattle
Languages: English, Spanish
Pronouns: she/her
Stories
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King County leases Issaquah motel in search for new quarantine sites
King County is looking for places to house hundreds of people, at least, who cannot self-isolate or quarantine in their own homes. A county spokesperson says officials could announce their next planned facility this weekend.
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'Our faith is most tested': Believers in Seattle area face challenge of coronavirus
The outbreak of coronavirus is challenging people of faith around the Seattle area.
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Vertical farming tries to bring crops to urban consumers in Seattle region
In a Kirkland QFC, herbs and greens are growing inside what looks like a big refrigerator lit with soft purple light.
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Amazon employees say they've been warned about speaking out on climate change
Maren Costa says she’s been proud to work for Amazon for 15 years. So she says she was surprised when she was warned that she could be fired for speaking out about the company’s policies on climate change.
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Seattle Archdiocese settles sexual abuse case from 1960s
The Seattle Archdiocese says it’ll pay $250,000 to settle a sexual abuse case from the 1960s.
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Is your kid missing vaccines? Seattle Schools is offering one more free clinic
Michael Anthony drove his 13-year-old daughter, Aunna, all the way from Tacoma to south Seattle to get a chicken pox shot.
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He's been shot at, his fish stolen. All because he exercises his tribal treaty rights in Skagit Valley
Scott Schuyler says he’s been shot at, his tires slashed, his fish stolen. He’s gotten death threats on social media.
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New plan for endangered Washington bird doesn't make anyone happy
Washington state has a new conservation plan for marbled murrelets, an endangered seabird. But both environmental advocates and the timber industry are upset about it.
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Leschi Elementary in Seattle closes after massive norovirus outbreak
Leschi Elementary School was closed Friday after a norovirus outbreak that left more than 100 students and staff members sick.
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Tribe looks to bring back oyster farming to Dungeness Spit
The Dungeness Spit, a few miles northwest of Sequim, could soon get some controversial neighbors: 80,000 bags of oysters.