
Daylina Miller
Daylina Miller, multimedia reporter for Health News Florida, was hired to help further expand health coverage statewide.
She began her journalism career as a teen columnist on the Tampa Tribune's first board of community columnists in 2005 and has since worked as a reporter in various capacities for several Tampa Bay news organizations.
Daylina is a graduate of the University of South Florida's School of Mass Communications where she started the school's Her Campus Magazine branch, served as a correspondent for USA Today College and wrote opinion columns for The Oracle.
She received her master's degree in New Media Journalism at Full Sail University and through the program started Dames & Dice, a tabletop gaming blog focused on feminist issues.
-
The number and rate of uninsured children continued to increase in Florida and across the nation in 2018, according to a report released today by...
-
Religious exemptions from vaccinations required for school children have been on the rise in Florida. Public health officials say even a small increase...
-
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services will penalize 2,583 hospitals nationwide for having too many Medicare patients readmitted within 30 days,...
-
A newly released report by Johns Hopkins University, Hospital Prices in the United States: An Analysis of U.S. Cities and States , shows that seven out...
-
In a two-story Salvation Army building in Sarasota a bustling, multi-agency program helps people with substance abuse issues.
-
The first human clinical trial is underway at Moffitt Cancer Center with what researchers are calling a "cancer vaccine."
-
Florida is now one of 16 states where federal and state officials are investigating lung-related illnesses that have suspected ties to e-cigarette use,...
-
Several civil legal aid organizations in Florida have filed a federal class action lawsuit against the agencies that operate the state's Medicaid system.
-
As most Florida students return to school on Monday, doctors are urging their parents to consider vaccinations beyond those required by the state, like...
-
By Daylina Miller A new report says Florida could save nearly $200 million in fiscal year 2022-23 by expanding the Medicaid program.