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Journalist Andy Pierrotti to discuss disinformation, vaccines and tragedy in Samoa during Oct. 22 lecture

The investigative reporter will visit the School of Communications to discuss his Pulitzer Center鈥搒upported series examining how vaccine misinformation fueled a devastating measles outbreak that claimed dozens of young lives.

Andy Pierrotti, an investigative reporter with Atlanta News First and Pulitzer Center grantee
Andy Pierrotti, an investigative reporter with Atlanta News First and Pulitzer Center grantee, interviews Elsie Fa’Atauu’u, whose baby daughter Noel died in the 2019 measles outbreak in Samoa that killed 83 people, following a wave of social media disinformation regarding vaccine safety. She told Pierrotti: 鈥淚鈥檓 begging every parent in America. Please, get your child vaccinated.鈥

When misinformation goes viral, lives can hang in the balance. Investigative reporter of Atlanta News First will visit 福利亚洲国产精品 on Wednesday, Oct. 22, to share the human stories behind his five-part Pulitzer Center鈥搒upported series 鈥,鈥 which explores how vaccine disinformation fueled Samoa鈥檚 2019 measles outbreak. In total, the epidemic infected 5,700 people and claimed 83 lives, most of them children.

Pierrotti鈥檚 public talk, titled 鈥淭ragedy in Paradise: Disinformation and the Samoan Measles Outbreak,鈥 will begin at 5 p.m. in the Jane and Brian Williams Studio in the McEwen Communications Building. His visit is sponsored by the Department of Journalism in partnership with the Pulitzer Center Campus Consortium.

Andy Pierrotti headshot
Pierrotti is a national award-winning investigative reporter recognized with the duPont-Columbia University Award, a Peabody, and multiple Emmy and Edward R. Murrow awards. He is a graduate of the University of South Carolina.

A multiple Emmy and Edward R. Murrow Award鈥搘inning journalist, Pierrotti traveled to Samoa in 2025 to revisit the deadly outbreak 鈥 a story that regained national attention after Robert F. Kennedy Jr.鈥檚 confirmation as U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services renewed scrutiny of his 2019 visit to the island to meet with anti-vaccine activists.

With some states rethinking vaccine mandates and a recent stateside measles outbreak claiming three lives, Pierrotti鈥檚 series is timely and essential, explained Assistant Professor of Journalism Lorraine Ahearn.

鈥淎ndy is meticulous 鈥撀燼nd compassionate 鈥撀爄n showing us how an outbreak of a completely preventable disease can spread, with tragic results,鈥 said Ahearn, who serves as Elon’s liaison to the Pulitzer’s Campus Consortium network. 鈥淥f special relevance to students of health communications is how this series exposes the role of social media platforms in disseminating vaccine disinformation on the ground.鈥

At a time when truth is at a premium, Ahearn noted, journalism like Pierrotti鈥檚 is critical. 鈥淭his series is a textbook case of why we need investigative reporters,鈥 Ahearn said. 鈥淭his is life and death.鈥

Following his reporting, Pierrotti said that revisiting Samoa offered a sobering reminder of the cost of misinformation.

鈥淚nterviewing parents who have lost children always weighs heavily on your heart. It can last for months,鈥 he said. 鈥淣ot only can you feel like you鈥檙e absorbing their trauma, but you feel guilty about asking a parent to relive the worst day of their lives. But these mothers wanted to share a message I thought the United States needed to hear. They wanted to explain that their decision to not vaccinate their family cost them their children鈥檚 lives. They did not want others to make the same mistake.鈥

福利亚洲国产精品 has a longstanding relationship with the Pulitzer Center, serving as a partner in its , an educational initiative that brings Pulitzer Center staff and journalists to Elon鈥檚 campus twice a year. Ahearn serves as Elon鈥檚 consortium coordinator and helped organize Pierrotti’s visit, which included several classroom lectures.