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Jim Atkinson

Jim Atkinson

Jim Atkinson, a contributing editor of TEXAS MONTHLY, has been a working journalist in Texas for over 25 years. He was a courthouse reporter for the Dallas Times Herald and a political correspondent for Dallas’ KERA-TV Channel 13’s newsroom during the 1970’s. In l974, he helped to found D Magazine, the city magazine of Dallas, and worked there as an editor and writer. In l980, he began writing for TEXAS MONTHLY and other publications including Playboy and National Review. He has won numerous awards for reporting and is the author of two books.

For most of this career, Atkinson has written about crime and the criminal justice system. Five years ago, he decided to turn his energies to reporting on health and medical science, primarily in the pages of TEXAS MONTHLY. Since then, he has written about everything from the flu to cardiac surgery to sexual addiction, and has won seven awards for medical reporting.

Atkinson lives in Dallas with his wife, Ann.

Features

How do you know when a child molester is cured? Are you willing to take his word for it? David Wayne Jones hopes so. Thirteen years ago he was convicted of preying on little boys at the East Dallas YMCA, but he could soon be out of jail and back on the street. Your street.

San Antonio's Marshevet Hooker is not just any old high school sprinter; she's an Olympic gold medalist in the making. Meet her and nine other women we're betting will lead the new Texas—and the world.

\More than a decade ago I wrote about the virtues of the drinking life and the comforts of what I called a “bar bar.” Then I hit rock bottom. It’s been eight years now since I took my last drink—and I’m finally ready to tell the rest of the story.

He's all hearts.

The ride of his life.

If your family has a history of cancer, are you doomed? Even though many of his relatives—including his famous father—succumbed to the disease, Mickey Mantle, Jr., didn’t think so. Then he got sick.

Even if you’re not, many Texans are: Sex Addicts Anonymous has 61 chapters across the state, tending to the tattered psyches of exhibitionists and other tormented souls.

Bypass surgery with almost no pain, and you get to go home three days later? Don’t have a coronary: It’s happening right now, in Texas.

Smoking out the truth.

Itchy eyes, sore throat, runny nose: It must be allergy season. But what causes allergies? How do you pick a doctor? And what’s the best treatment? An in-depth look at an affliction that’s nothing to sneeze at.

Today students at Southwestern Medical School in Dallas are expected to master more hard-core science than ever before. Yet after graduation, they’ll have to keep studying, and be counselors and business experts too. A hard look at the way we teach our doctors—and why it has had to change.

When a world-class athlete like Austin’s Lance Armstrong gets cancer, it’s a shock—for him, and for every man who has ever considered himself invincible.

Now that the crack epidemic has leveled off and gang violence is down, urban Texas is being terrorized by a new type of criminal: the superpredator. He murders without motive, feels no remorse, and worst of all, seldom gets caught.

What could drive a suburban housewife to murder? The bizarre cases of Rowlett’s Darlie Routier and Fairview’s Candy Montgomery hint at the answer, and it may be closer to home than we’d like to think.

Darrell Royal’s supremely simple invention took Texas teams to the top and kept them there.

Candy Montgomery thought her affair with Allan Gore was over, until she found herself fighting for her life against Allan’s wife.

Urban refugees fleeing high-tech Dallas have created ersatz rural communities in the nearby countryside. This isolated, pastoral life sometimes erupts into adultery and murder.

No Matter where you are, there’s someplace to be nowhere.

It’s a noble institution, especially if you can master all its subtle skills: not being there, the second call, holding forth, and another thing...

Columns | Miscellany

Many Texans are woefully unprepared for what has become our fastest-growing health care problem: taking care of Mom and Dad.

Historically, Southeast Texas and cancer have gone together like, well, pollution and disease. I wish I could say things were different today.

Are the toxic fungi that launched a thousand lawsuits really as dangerous as everyone says? Don't believe the hype.

A Houston couple says a hospital is responsible for their daughter's severe disabilities. Should Texas' highest court agree, the case will change health care as we know it.

What is the safest way to dispose of a diseased cow carcass—and what does it have to do with the Ames strain of anthrax?

Texans love to say that everything’s bigger here, but when it comes to the waistlines in one in four of our largest cities, that’s nothing to brag about.

If you think your flulike symptoms could be anthrax, don't call your HMO—call your doctor. And other advice the television "experts" should have told you.

Why does Potter County have the state's highest mortality rate? Poverty is only one answer.

When I lost my father to cancer this summer, the greatest comfort I found was in understanding how to grieve. That came in handy on September 11.

A Dallas epidemiologist has made it his mission to learn the truth about Gulf War Syndrome, even if he has to fight the government.

I learned a shocking lesson when I visited San Antonio's "hot lab," where some of the world's deadliest microbes are studied. The germs are winning.

The prescription to treat the sickest areas in Texas isn't what you think.

The doctors at Abilene’s Voice Institute of West Texas can treat all manner of problems with the way you talk? Speech, speech!

When a dog chewed off a toddler's nose, cheeks, and lips, the doctors at Dallas' Children's Medical Center sprang into action.

The noble—and Nobel—efforts of a Houston pharmacology professor could someday help in the treatment of cancer.

The truth—what we can discern, anyway—about Tom Landry’s leukemia.

You can’t call it a Texas disease, but meningococcemia—a blood-borne form of meningitis—afflicts a fair number of the state’s children. And if the FDA will let him, a Dallas pediatrician thinks he can treat it.

If you had a blood transfusion before 1992 or have ever shared a needle, you could have hepatitis C. You may feel fine, but it could be killing you.

An anxious, alcoholic, stressed, and depressed Dallasite. A suicidal San Antonian. For each, a seemingly visionary treatment.

Cash-poor PBS stations can’t seem to come up with innovative new ideas, so they ought to resurrect an innovative old one: Newsroom, the best local public- affairs program in Texas history.

Eating a peanut shouldn’t be a particularly memorable experience, but for Dallasite Mona Cain and countless other allergic Americans, it’s a matter of life and death.

At the Texas Woman’s University Aphasia Center in Dallas, a promising new treatment is helping stroke victims learn to read, write, and speak again.

Vertigo isn’t just the stuff of Hitchcock thrillers—it’s a debilitating disease, as Dallas radio talk show host Kevin McCarthy found out the hard way.

“Michael Jackson’s disease” sounds like a punch line, but the pigment-robbing skin disorder is no joke. Just ask Dallas County commissioner John Wiley Price.

You might say Tarek Souryal is the most important Dallas Maverick: He doesn’t score or rebound, but he reconstructs million-dollar ankles and knees, and that makes him a real team player.

A year after a grand mal seizure left me convulsing on the floor, I’m still finding my way back into everyday life.

Reporter

The hybrid of my dreams.

A plug for new appliances.

Talking trash (and compost).

Lawn of a new day.

Jim Atkinson changes out his insulation.

Can Jim Atkinson change the world?

The esophagus explained.

Let’s have a heart-to-heart.

Sweat 101.

Fire ants forever. (sigh.)

The ABCs of HPV.

Ten foods to gorge on in 2007.

The unsweetened truth about diabetes.

The newest nightmare disease.

The buzz on mosquitoes.

Why ozone is indeed a menace.

Blood will tell.

Oh, say, can you see?

Fat versus Fit.

What to do if your doctor is a quack.

Here comes the sun.

Sneeze play.

Pain, pain, go away

Minister of Health Jim Atkinson cures what ails us.

As more and more children fall off the health-insurance rolls, chaos reigns at Children's Medical Center Dallas, which used to have the best pediatric ER in Texas, and the quality of care for everyone suffers.

Why Collin County is the new Dallas.

The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center is put under the microscope.

Can Al Lipscomb survive both the ballot box and the jury box?

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