Lori Teresa Yearwood, who referred to herself as a “trauma-informed journalist,” has passed away at the age of 57. She reportedly died on September 17, 2023 at her home in Salt Lake City.
Lori died from Ovarian Cancer. After a long time under the hospital care Lori Teresa Yearwood gave up the fight against Cancer. “She had the chops of a great reporter with lived experience,” said David Wallis, the former managing director of the Economic Hardship Reporting Project, founded by the writer Barbara Ehrenreich, which gives grants to journalists like Ms. Yearwood, some of them on the brink of poverty, to write about social inequality for major publications.
“She had a unique voice, and was able to get stories no one else was getting,” Mr. Wallis said in a phone interview.
What is Lori Teresa Yearwood Cause of Death?
Lori died at her Salt Lake City home on September 17, 2023, according to a source. Lori was only 57 years old when she died tragically.
Lori died as a result of ovarian cancer, according to her friend Sherry. As soon as word of the late journalist’s death went online, people began paying respect to her.
The late journalist rarely spoke publicly about her health concerns. As a result, more information about her illness is unclear at the time of this publishing.
Before her death, She was a former reporter for the Miami Herald, the St. Louis Post Dispatch, and the Syracuse Newspapers, and she specialized in covering underrepresented groups of people.
She formerly worked as a reporter for The Miami Herald, The St. Louis Post-Dispatch, and The Syracuse Newspapers. She was always interested in writing about people from underrepresented and misrepresented categories.
Because of my own experience of losing my family and material assets, followed by falling into homelessness between 2014 and 2016, she has the uncommon advantage of reporting from a “inside out” perspective.
An a speaker and journalist, Lori Teresa Yearwood essays, and articles have appeared in numerous magazines, including The Washington Post, The New Republic, The New York Times, Mother Jones, Slate, The San Francisco Chronicle, CNBC, and Oprah’s “O” Magazine.