Researchers tackle metastatic breast cancer
“We have a lot of work to do to improve survival for metastatic breast cancer,” says N.Y. doctor working to develop new treatments
Watch CBS News
Jon LaPook, M.D. is the award-winning chief medical correspondent for CBS News, where his reporting is featured on all CBS News platforms and programs.
Since joining CBS News in 2006, LaPook has delivered more than 1,200 reports on a wide variety of breaking news and trending stories in the health and medical fields, as well as feature stories on music, lifestyle and profiles of entertainment stars. LaPook's work has appeared on "CBS Sunday Morning," the "CBS Evening News," 60 Minutes, "CBS Mornings," "Face The Nation with Margaret Brennan" and CBS News Radio.
LaPook reported extensively on COVID-19 and delivered near-daily updates at the height of the pandemic on the spread of the virus and what was being done to stop it. Over the years, he has covered both international and national health issues, including the devastating 2010 earthquake in Haiti and ensuing cholera outbreak, the outbreaks of Ebola and Zika and the aftermath of Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico, and a wide range of health topics such as Alzheimer's, cancer, cardiovascular disease, obesity, mental health, gun violence, vaccine hesitancy, AIDS, traumatic brain injury and health care inequity.
His interviews include President Obama on health care reform, Aly Raisman about the U.S.A. Gymnastics sexual abuse scandal, and Dr. Anthony Fauci, CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky and NIH Director Dr. Francis Collins about a variety of public health problems. For more than a decade, he documented a couple's journey dealing with Alzheimer's disease. He has done multiple segments profiling health issues involving celebrities such as Ryan Reynolds, Angelina Jolie, Gilda Radner, Bob Saget, Alan Alda and Marcia Cross. He reported on the challenges medical professionals face in dealing with long COVID; he's profiled frontline health care workers; he's interviewed producer Phil Rosenthal and actor Ray Romano about the health benefits of travel, and interviewed Norman Lear, his father-in-law, about the challenges of facing a pandemic at the age of 98.
LaPook is also professor of medicine at the NYU Grossman School of Medicine, and an internist and gastroenterologist at NYU Langone Health. He is the creator and executive director of the NYU Langone Empathy Project, which seeks to promote a culture of empathy in medicine. In May 2022, he gave the commencement address for the classes of 2020 and 2021 at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and spoke about the importance of empathy in health care.
LaPook's work at CBS News has earned him five Emmy Awards. He earned Emmy honors in 2012 for covering the national shortage of cancer drugs; he was part of the team that won for the 2013 coverage of the Boston Marathon Bombings; he earned two for his work on "CBS Sunday Morning;" and in 2021 as part of the team that earned "CBS Morning's" "Outstanding Live News Program."
In 2020, LaPook was awarded a Drama Desk Award for his work as medical contributor to "Stars in the House," keeping the theater community informed throughout the coronavirus pandemic.
In 2018, The Alliance for Women in Media awarded him a Gracie Award in the News Feature Series category for two groundbreaking 60 Minutes reports on the U.S.A. Gymnastics sexual abuse scandal. That same year he was named a George Foster Peabody Awards finalist for his 60 Minutes work on the scandal. He has won two Edward R. Murrow Awards: in 2007 and 2013. He earned a New York Press Club Award for Journalism for a WCBS-AM News Team Special, "Eye on Ebola." In 2010, he was recognized by the Webby Awards for his documentary series "CBS Doc Dot Com."
In the medical field, LaPook works to weave media and the arts into training, with an eye on enhancing the experience between healthcare professionals and their patients. He has also done extensive work in the field of medical computing, including writing a medical practice management software package that he sold in 1999 to a company that was later acquired by Emdeon Corporation, the parent company of WebMD.
Born in Mineola, N.Y., LaPook graduated with honors from Yale University and received his M.D. from Columbia College of Physicians and Surgeons, where he was elected to AOA, the national medical honor society. He completed his residency in internal medicine and fellowships in gastroenterology and medical informatics at Presbyterian Hospital in New York City.
“We have a lot of work to do to improve survival for metastatic breast cancer,” says N.Y. doctor working to develop new treatments
An NYU psychologist may have found a way to retrain our brains against racial bias and prejudice
A new study found that 9/11 first responders suffering from PTSD with flashbacks have a higher risk of cognitive imparment
Firefighter Pat Hardison suffered severe burns in 2001. One year ago, he took a chance that has changed his life
With the threat of Zika virus spreading in the United States, one mother is speaking out about her young son living with microcephaly
While ALS patients lose their ability to speak as the disease progresses, they do not have to lose their voices
Dr. John Sotos, a physician and medical historian, says Mary Todd Lincoln was not only misunderstood - but misdiagnosed
In a small house in downtown Orlando, healing starts with a call for help at an LGBT resource center
To the trained eye, signs of Parkinson's disease were apparent even as Muhammad Ali was at the pinnacle of his career
Spinal cord procedure uses stem cells in the damaged areas in hopes of restoring function and movement
CDC says Zika virus has been found in a second mosquito, Aedes albopictus, which is found in more states of the U.S.
Millions more will need to be spent on Zika to prevent its spread
"The one misconception that I'm hearing," one doctor said, "is that it's not really not going to be a problem"
The CDC has requested nearly $2 billion to keep Zika at bay in the U.S. -- but Congress has yet to provide the money
President Obama is committing more than $500 million to fight the Zika virus; but some experts worry that's not enough -- and that the U.S. is not prepared