Articles By Julia Hotz S Profile Solutions Journalism Network
Julia Hotz (she/her) is SJN’s Fellowships Manager: She currently leads SJN's youth mental health work, including its HEAL and Youth Building & Belonging Fellowships. Previously, she created and led SJN’s LEDE Fellowship and Complicating the Narratives (CTN) Fellowship. She also writes solutions journalism about mental health issues for outlets including The New York Times and The Boston Globe, and is the author of an award-winning book on social prescribing, "The Connection Cure"... Julia Hotz is a solutions-focused journalist and award-winning author of THE CONNECTION CURE (Simon & Schuster)—the first book chronicling the science & stories of social prescribing. She currently works at the Solutions Journalism Network and advises Social Prescribing USA and Walk with a Doc. For her insights on the health benefits of movement, nature, art, service, and belonging, she has delivered keynote speeches and TEDx talks, taught medical professionals, and has been interviewed on over 100 podcasts and...
Her reporting and writing has been featured in The Boston Globe, BBC, The Guardian, The Wall Street Journal, Scientific American, NBC, WIRED, TIME, PBS, Slate, The New York Times, Fast Company, and more. Before becoming a journalist, Julia worked as a teacher, bartender, pizza server, and camp forest ranger. She enjoys running, biking, hiking, riling up dance floors, and budget traveling around the world. Julia Hotz is a solutions journalist and author of THE CONNECTION CURE: The Prescriptive Power of Movement, Nature, Art, Service and Belonging, the first book chronicling the science, stories, and spread of social prescribing. Julia Hotz spoke with Ashley Hopkinson on November 19, 2024. Click here to read the full interview with insights highlighted.
Ashley Hopkinson: Can you introduce yourself, tell me a little bit about yourself and what brought you to the work that is the social prescribing book? Julia Hotz: My name is Julia Hotz. I am a journalist. I also work with the Solutions Journalism Network, managing some of our fellowships around youth mental health and a program called Complicating the Narrative. I recently wrote a book, The Connection Cure, which is about the science and spread of social prescribing, which I believe is a key policy and practical intervention to support the goals of collective... In 2018, before joining Solutions Journalism Network, I was studying sociology and public health in England.
It was in that year that the British government established the world’s first Minister of Loneliness. In that announcement, I learned that actually loneliness, the absence of meaningful connections, is associated with all of these adverse health outcomes: anxiety, depression, chronic pain, dementia, even premature death. Some epidemiologists have compared the health consequences of loneliness to smoking 15 cigarettes a day. Julia Hotz is a solutions-focused journalist based in New York. Her stories have appeared in The New York Times, WIRED, Scientific American, The Boston Globe, Time, and more. She helps other journalists report on the big new ideas changing the world at the Solutions Journalism Network.
The Connection Cure is her first book. Next City is a nonprofit news organization that believes journalists have the power to amplify solutions and spread workable ideas from one city to the next city. Our mission is to inspire greater economic, environmental, and social justice in cities. Learn more about us → We depend on our members for support. Join today to read unlimited stories, gain instant access to ebooks or webinars, and support the spread of solutions that liberate cities.
Julia Hotz is a solutions-focused journalist and award-winning author of The Connection Cure, a book chronicling the science, stories, and spread of social prescribing. She helps other journalists report on evidence-backed ideas at the Solutions Journalism Network, where she runs their mental health fellowship programs and previously hosted an award-winning newscast on Google, “Tell Me Something Good.” Hotz... Her reporting has directly influenced public county health policy, inspired programming at the New York Fed, and was featured on the hit NBC series New Amsterdam. Hotz was also a Fulbright scholar. The Carter Center | One Copenhill | 453 Freedom Parkway | Atlanta, GA 30307 All Rights Reserved | The Carter Center is a 501(c)(3) charity (Tax ID# 58-1454716).
Julia Hotz is Solutions Journalism Network’s Fellowships Manager. She created and leads SJN’s LEDE Fellowship and Complicating the Narratives (CTN) Fellowship, and supports both colleagues and partners to create solutions journalism fellowship programs. She’s currently reporting “The Connection Cure” (Simon and Schuster, 2024), and has written solutions journalism about mental health issues for The New York Times, The Boston Globe, Wired magazine, Scientific American, Bloomberg, Time magazine,... Knight Center for Journalism in the Americas300 West Dean KeetonRoom 3.212Austin, TX, 78712 Email: journalismcourses@austin.utexas.edu When I first read Julia Hotz’s The Connection Cure last spring, I was going through what felt like an interminable bout of insomnia from which I could find little relief, though there seemed to...
Julia’s book, then, seemed to appear at just the right moment for me. Julia is a journalist with the Solutions Journalism Network, and her dive into the world of social prescriptions—which she defines in the book as a nonmedical resource or activity that aims to improve a... “I wrote this magazine feature,” she said, “and it was the longest article I'd ever written about social prescribing, and it really, really interested me.” Good health, Hotz notes, isn’t limited to physical condition but also includes social and emotional well-being. We can cultivate a richer sense of health from five key categories of social prescription: movement, nature, art, service, and belonging. The Connection Cure, first released in June 2024, was part of a wave of books touting the deeper, often overlooked benefits of human connection.
“I think it was very interesting timing,” said Julia, “such that we knew, you know, there had been this big gap, and now there's so much great work being put out there about the... I recently caught up with Julia to talk about the recent paperback release of The Connection Cure.
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Julia Hotz (she/her) Is SJN’s Fellowships Manager: She Currently Leads
Julia Hotz (she/her) is SJN’s Fellowships Manager: She currently leads SJN's youth mental health work, including its HEAL and Youth Building & Belonging Fellowships. Previously, she created and led SJN’s LEDE Fellowship and Complicating the Narratives (CTN) Fellowship. She also writes solutions journalism about mental health issues for outlets including The New York Times and The Boston Globe, and...
Her Reporting And Writing Has Been Featured In The Boston
Her reporting and writing has been featured in The Boston Globe, BBC, The Guardian, The Wall Street Journal, Scientific American, NBC, WIRED, TIME, PBS, Slate, The New York Times, Fast Company, and more. Before becoming a journalist, Julia worked as a teacher, bartender, pizza server, and camp forest ranger. She enjoys running, biking, hiking, riling up dance floors, and budget traveling around th...
Ashley Hopkinson: Can You Introduce Yourself, Tell Me A Little
Ashley Hopkinson: Can you introduce yourself, tell me a little bit about yourself and what brought you to the work that is the social prescribing book? Julia Hotz: My name is Julia Hotz. I am a journalist. I also work with the Solutions Journalism Network, managing some of our fellowships around youth mental health and a program called Complicating the Narrative. I recently wrote a book, The Conne...
It Was In That Year That The British Government Established
It was in that year that the British government established the world’s first Minister of Loneliness. In that announcement, I learned that actually loneliness, the absence of meaningful connections, is associated with all of these adverse health outcomes: anxiety, depression, chronic pain, dementia, even premature death. Some epidemiologists have compared the health consequences of loneliness to s...
The Connection Cure Is Her First Book. Next City Is
The Connection Cure is her first book. Next City is a nonprofit news organization that believes journalists have the power to amplify solutions and spread workable ideas from one city to the next city. Our mission is to inspire greater economic, environmental, and social justice in cities. Learn more about us → We depend on our members for support. Join today to read unlimited stories, gain instan...