Helen McArdle

Health Correspondent

Helen McArdle is the Health Correspondent for The Herald. She joined in 2008 and went on to become a news reporter and transport correspondent. Since 2020, her focus has been on the impact of the pandemic on the NHS. Ms McArdle’s journalism honours include News Story of the Year at the Medical Journalism Association awards and she was also named Health & Science Reporter of the Year at the British Journalism Awards in 2018 for The Herald’s coverage of NHS Tayside’s use of charity donations to cover general spending. She was named Specialist Reporter of the Year at the 2022 Scottish Press Awards and picked up the Stephen White Award for the Reporting of Science in a Non-Science Context at the Association for British Science Writers awards.

Helen McArdle is the Health Correspondent for The Herald. She joined in 2008 and went on to become a news reporter and transport correspondent. Since 2020, her focus has been on the impact of the pandemic on the NHS. Ms McArdle’s journalism honours include News Story of the Year at the Medical Journalism Association awards and she was also named Health & Science Reporter of the Year at the British Journalism Awards in 2018 for The Herald’s coverage of NHS Tayside’s use of charity donations to cover general spending. She was named Specialist Reporter of the Year at the 2022 Scottish Press Awards and picked up the Stephen White Award for the Reporting of Science in a Non-Science Context at the Association for British Science Writers awards.

Latest articles from Helen McArdle

'Pivotal' new COPD diagnostic service aims to cut waiting times across Glasgow

Scotland's largest health board has launched a new digital service which aims to speed-up diagnosis of a common respiratory disorder and cut waiting times for treatment. The digital diagnostic service for patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) will bring together appointments management, clinical information, test data, and outcome letters.

How pandemics start? Chimps found eating bat faeces contaminated with a coronavirus

Scientists from Stirling have warned over the risk of new pandemics after they discovered chimps eating bat faeces contaminated with a form of coronavirus.  The study led by the University of Stirling jointly with the University of Wisconsin-Madison was prompted when animal behaviour researcher, Dr Pawel Fedurek, observed wild chimpanzees consume bat droppings - known as "guano" - from a tree hollow in Budongo Forest in Uganda.