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Korin Miller

womenshealthmag.comUSA
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General WellnessSexual HealthCelebrity HealthLifestyle Trends
About

Korin Miller is a freelance health and wellness writer whose work centers on turning complex medical information and evolving health trends into clear, action-focused stories. She writes regularly for Women’s Health on general wellness, sexual health and relationships, and lifestyle trends, and she extends that coverage across outlets like Men’s Health, SELF, Prevention, Yahoo, and Byrdie. Her reporting is distinguished by its reliance on medical experts and research, paired with straightforward guidance that readers can use immediately in their daily lives.

Health news explainers and prevention advice

At Women’s Health, Miller covers timely health news and medical research with a strong emphasis on what people can do to protect themselves and improve their long-term health. In a recent piece on a highly contagious virus, she focuses on one simple preventive habit, anchoring the story in expert commentary to make risk and mitigation feel concrete rather than abstract. In her coverage of nutrition science, she breaks down a study showing that following healthy eating patterns—such as low-fat, low-carb, or Mediterranean-style diets—can improve cholesterol, triglycerides, and blood pressure even without weight loss, stressing that health is not defined by the number on the scale. She uses quotes from registered dietitians to explain how better metabolic health reduces strain on major body systems and lowers disease risk, translating clinical findings into everyday language. Her Glamour feature on epidemic fascination takes a broader view, arguing that public interest in outbreaks can support awareness and preparedness, and again grounds the piece in wellness and lifestyle implications rather than sensationalism.

Miller also writes accessible explainers around specific medical issues tied to current headlines. In her piece on Serena Williams’ branchial cyst, she uses the tennis star’s health scare as an entry point to define what branchial cysts are, how they develop, and when they require treatment, pairing the celebrity narrative with clear medical background and doctor-driven guidance. Her coverage of Selma Blair’s multiple sclerosis diagnosis and subsequent updates traces the timeline of symptoms, diagnosis, and management while explaining the basics of MS and how it affects daily life. Across these stories, she consistently positions physicians and specialists at the center of the narrative, using their explanations to demystify terminology and clarify risk, prognosis, and options.

Celebrity health and wellness narratives

A major strand of Miller’s work at Women’s Health is celebrity-focused health reporting that uses well-known figures to illustrate broader wellness themes. Her piece on Christie Brinkley’s “40 Health Habits” catalogs the routines the model relies on—ranging from varied workouts and everyday movement to hydration and diet—framing them as practical habits that support longevity and energy rather than quick fixes. In a profile on Martha Stewart, she explores where Stewart is now, weaving in details about her health, projects, and personal reinventions to show how lifestyle, work, and wellbeing intersect later in life. Her coverage of Christina Aguilera’s topless Instagram photo focuses on the singer’s sculpted abs and legs, but situates the imagery within ongoing conversations about body confidence, fitness, and aging in the public eye.

These celebrity pieces are not straight entertainment; they serve as vehicles for discussing exercise routines, nutrition choices, aging, and self-presentation. By combining recognizable names with specific habits and expert commentary, Miller makes health guidance feel aspirational yet attainable. She also uses celebrity narratives to normalize health challenges, as in her reporting on Blair’s MS and Williams’ cyst, where she emphasizes that serious conditions can affect anyone and that informed care and advocacy matter for every patient. This approach allows her to move between light, habit-oriented content and heavier diagnostic stories while maintaining a consistent focus on practical takeaways.

Sexual health and relationship coverage

Sexual health and relationships are core parts of Miller’s beat, and they recur both at Women’s Health and in her work for other outlets. Her author bio at Women’s Health explicitly highlights sexual health and relationships as a primary specialization, alongside general wellness and lifestyle trends. In a feature for Prevention, she writes about “The Secret To Keeping Your Sex Life Hot In A Long-Term Relationship, According To Science,” drawing on research and expert insights to translate findings into everyday relationship advice. The piece focuses on how couples in long-term partnerships can sustain intimacy and satisfaction, making scientific conclusions easy to apply without diluting their rigor.

Throughout this coverage, Miller treats sexual health as an integral part of overall wellbeing rather than a niche topic. She balances discussion of desire, communication, and relational dynamics with evidence-based guidance from therapists and sexual health professionals, reflecting the same expert-driven approach she uses in physical health reporting. Her consistent attention to sexual health and relationships differentiates her from general assignment health reporters who may only cover these topics occasionally; for Miller, they are a defined and recurring strand of her work.

Lifestyle trends, products, and cultural features

Beyond clinical health and intimacy, Miller covers lifestyle trends, products, and cultural stories that intersect with wellbeing. Her PopSugar Health guide to the best earplugs for sleep is structured as a commerce-forward product roundup, but it is informed by doctors’ criteria and focuses on how design, fit, and material can genuinely improve sleep quality and comfort. In her Glamour work, she is described as specializing in wellness, commerce, and lifestyle trends, and she often uses trend pieces to explore how consumer behavior and cultural shifts reflect deeper health priorities. Her author bios also note that her writing appears in outlets like Men’s Health, SELF, Prevention, and Yahoo, underscoring her role in covering broad lifestyle and wellness topics for a range of audiences.

At Women’s Health, she occasionally writes culture and legacy features that still tie back to health, resilience, and community. Her article “6 Things We Can Thank Black Women For” highlights contributions across history and contemporary culture, framing recognition as part of a broader conversation about representation and wellbeing. In “How Martin Luther King Jr.'s Kids Carry On His Legacy To This Day,” she focuses on the family’s ongoing work and influence, connecting historical legacy to modern activism and social health. These pieces show that Miller’s beat extends beyond individual habits and diagnoses to include social context and the ways identity, culture, and history shape health outcomes and lived experience.

Across outlets, Miller’s body of work combines health news, celebrity narratives, sexual health, product guidance, and cultural reporting, always with an emphasis on expert sources and practical, clear language. She covers general wellness, sexual health and relationships, and lifestyle trends as defined areas of focus, and her recurring use of doctors, researchers, and specialists distinguishes her coverage from more generic lifestyle reporting.

Also covering this beat

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Aislinn Antrim is an associate editorial director at Pharmacy Times and a journalist who connects clinical advances, regulation, and the changing role of pharmacists. She writes pharmacy-centered health coverage on chronic disease therapeutics, specialty and oncology care, workforce pressures, and advocacy. Her reporting explains FDA actions, policy shifts, drug pipelines, and the real-world effects of new evidence on patient care and pharmacy practice. She often uses interviews and expert conversations to show how pharmacists improve adherence, manage side effects, navigate access and benefits, and coordinate care with prescribers. She also covers burnout, staffing strain, and the future of pharmacy practice, with an eye on how policy and economics shape work at the dispenser.

USA·Health
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Alex Cabrero

ksltv.com

Alex Cabrero is an Emmy award-winning KSL TV reporter who covers where health, safety and community life meet, always focused on how decisions and events affect everyday people. He has been with KSL since 2004, bringing long experience in breaking news, public service coverage and human-centered features. His beat includes public health, emergency response, technology, local infrastructure, environment and science, framed through community well-being and resilience. He reports on issues like mental health initiatives, law enforcement staffing, environmental hazards, rescues, wildfire detection tools, land-use fights and scientific discoveries, making technical and policy details clear for a general audience. He also produces many positive, everyday-life features on families, veterans, farmers, sports and local traditions. His style is direct and conversational, often built around a central person or family whose experience carries the story across TV, digital and social platforms.

USA·Health
AP

Allison Palmer

sacbee.com

Allison Palmer stands out for turning complex microbiome and brain-health research into clear, service stories tied to everyday habits. She covers health, wellness and lifestyle topics for The Sacramento Bee, focusing on emerging trends that help readers build positive, sustainable routines. Her reporting on the gut microbiome and healthy aging uses vivid case studies, including a rare supercentenarian, to connect diet, bacterial communities and longevity to daily eating choices. Another strand of her work examines oral bacteria and brain health, linking gum infections to changes in brain tissue and to simple oral-care practices. Since 2024, her wellness coverage has appeared across the McClatchy network, alongside pieces on technology, travel, lifestyle and commerce. She favors reported explainers with direct takeaways, keeps scientific detail intact, and strips away jargon to help readers build realistic long-term habits.

USA·Health
AK

Alyssa Kelly

uppermichiganssource.com

Alyssa Kelly reports on health and emotional local stories that show how everyday experiences shape people’s sense of safety and wellbeing. They work in the digital newsroom at TV6 & FOX UP, contributing text and video pieces on community life and public interest topics. Their beat centers on health and safety in ordinary settings, especially outdoors, and on animal and family stories tied to wellbeing and memory. They cover issues like tick exposure during routine park visits and long-term pet disappearances and reunions, using specific details, clear timelines, and direct quotes to make the stakes feel immediate and personal. Kelly’s headlines often foreground quoted phrases from families and pet owners, giving their reporting a conversational, human-centered tone. They also collaborate with other reporters on health and safety stories that connect individual cases to wider public concerns.

USA·Health
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