Elissa Nadworny Elissa Nadworny is an NPR correspondent covering reproductive rights and abortion.
Elissa
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Elissa Nadworny

Wanyu Zhang/NPR
Elissa
Wanyu Zhang/NPR

Elissa Nadworny

Correspondent, Reproductive Rights

Elissa Nadworny is an NPR correspondent covering reproductive rights and abortion.

She also regularly reports on international conflict, with a special focus on children and families. She has spent several months in Ukraine covering the war with Russia and in Israel, covering the war with Hamas and the humanitarian crisis in Gaza.

She guest hosts NPR radio shows such as All Things Considered, Weekend Edition and special election coverage.

In 2023, she tracked down a classroom of kindergarteners from eastern Ukraine, displaced by the war. The project took eight months, spanned multiple countries and continents, and told the story of children and families dealing with the trauma, loss, and fear that conflict brings.

Her work has won awards including a James Beard Award, an Edward R. Murrow Award for excellence in innovation and several Gracie Awards.

She's a Livingston Award finalist for a story about college students getting their degrees from inside a state prison.

Other stories that have resonated with her include crawling in the sewers below a college campus to test wastewater for the coronavirus, sitting with the elderly living along the front lines in Ukraine's east, and the story of a pregnant woman in Gaza who gave birth amid abysmal and fast deteriorating hospital conditions.

In 2018, she went on an epic search for the history behind her own high school's classroom skeleton.

Before joining NPR in 2014, Nadworny worked at Bloomberg News, reporting from the White House.

Originally from Erie, Pa., Nadworny has a bachelor's degree in documentary film from Skidmore College and a master's degree in journalism from Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism.

Story Archive

Sunday

NPR staffers share their favorite fiction of 2024 so far

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Friday

Tonya Morris, from Cincinnati, reacts during the presidential debate between President Joe Biden and Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump at Tillie's Lounge on Thursday, June 27, 2024, in Cincinnati Carolyn Kaster/AP hide caption

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Carolyn Kaster/AP

Roundup: Supreme Court's abortion, Jan. 6 rulings; Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.

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Reproductive rights activists demonstrated in front of the Supreme Court in Washington, D.C. on Monday. Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images hide caption

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Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images

Wednesday

BIRTH CONTROL PRESCRIPTIONS DOWN

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Friday

2 years late how the Dobbs Supreme Court decision changed abortion access

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Dr. Stephanie Arnold, who prefers bright-colored clothes instead of a white coat, meets with a patient who needs a pelvic exam. The family medicine clinic Arnold founded offers reproductive health care, including abortion, alongside all kinds of other care. “It’s a little bit of everything, which is very typical of family medicine,” she says. Elissa Nadworny/NPR hide caption

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Elissa Nadworny/NPR

Abortion As Primary Care, I

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Thursday

Demonstrators hold an abortion-rights rally outside the Supreme Court on March 26 as the justices of the court heard oral arguments in Food and Drug Administration v. Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine. Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images hide caption

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Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

PROVIDERS RESPOND TO MIFEPRISTONE RULING

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Wednesday

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Hilary Fung/NPR

6 key facts about abortion laws and the 2024 election

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Monday

Tuesday

Abortion rights activists at the Supreme Court in Washington, D.C. on March 26, the day the case about the abortion drug mifepristone was heard. The number of abortions in the U.S. increased, a study says, surprising researchers. Drew Angerer/AFP via Getty Images hide caption

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Drew Angerer/AFP via Getty Images

Despite state bans, abortions nationwide are up, driven by telehealth

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Thursday

Vargas Arango, 22, is a second-year student at Miami Dade College, studying business and psychology. Eva Marie Uzcategui for NPR hide caption

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Eva Marie Uzcategui for NPR

College student explores rare mental health condition in award-winning podcast

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Friday

The latest on student debt relief — and how young voters are feeling about it

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Thursday

Columbia president tells lawmakers at antisemitism hearing there is a 'moral crisis'

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Wednesday

Columbia University President to testify in congress

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The president of Columbia University, Nemat Shafik, testified before the House Education Committee alongside a Columbia University law professor and two trustees. Tom Williams/Getty Images hide caption

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Tom Williams/Getty Images

At antisemitism hearing, Columbia official tells lawmakers, 'We have a moral crisis'

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Thursday

The number of high school seniors who have filled out FAFSA is down from last year

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Wednesday

Way fewer students have filled out the FAFSA this year

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Wednesday

What life has been like for thousands of pregnant women in Gaza

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Thursday

A baby is looked after at the neonatal unit at Kamal Adhwan hospital in Beit Lahia in the Gaza Strip, where children are born with complications due to malnourished mothers. Omar El Qattaa for NPR hide caption

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Omar El Qattaa for NPR

'Struggle, struggle, struggle.' What new and expecting mothers are facing in Gaza

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Sunday

In Northern Israel, a deserted town bears witness to a different war

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Monday

Now that Sarah Barnes' son, Samuel, 2, is enrolled in Head Start, it's lifted an extra stress off Barnes' shoulders. "It just makes life a little bit easier having child care right on campus," she says. "I can literally walk over here between classes and check on him." Anthony Francis for NPR hide caption

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Anthony Francis for NPR

The new kids on campus? Toddlers, courtesy of Head Start

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Tuesday

Efi Chalikopoulou for NPR hide caption

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Efi Chalikopoulou for NPR

In a first, U.S. students will take the SAT entirely online (no pencils required)

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Tuesday

After a pause for the pandemic, Dartmouth will again require SAT and ACT scores

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