I was the founding community manager here at ReportingonHealth.org and helped design, build and create this community from 2010 to 2012. I created and launched the Career GPS blog and advocated design changes that would prioritize and highlight members' work. I'm happy to continue here as a member and incorporate important questions about health into my reporting.

I'm now the Social Media Manager at Public Radio International, where I work on the digital side of show like The World to build coverage and conversation around global health and immigration.

I've also worked as a freelance journalist writing online and magazine pieces from across Asia, including China, Thailand, Indonesia and Sri Lanka. I am the co-editor of Chinese Characters, a collection of stories about life in China to be published by UC Press this year. I was a South Asian Journalists Association Reporting Fellow in 2007/08 and the editor of the online magazine AsiaMedia from 2004 to 2007. I am now a consulting editor to the Journal of Asian Studies. My writing has appeared in the LA Weekly, Far Eastern Economic Review, Mother Jones OnlinePacific Standard, TimeOut Singapore and Global Voices.

Articles

<p>André Picard has an enviable and unusual journalism career. He began his professional life as a summer intern at <em>The Globe and Mail</em> in Canada and stayed on with the paper for 24 years. "Yes, I have a very boring CV," Picard joked in a phone interview from Montréal.</p>

<p>When we think about how to get eyeballs on our reporting these days, we talk a lot about Twitter and Facebook and online branding.&nbsp;Tracy Weber, senior reporter at ProPublica, took California Health Journalism Fellows back to the basics of getting and keeping readers: great writing.</p>

<p>Dr. Rishi Manchanda wants to practice smart medicine. From a clinic in South Los Angeles, he told the California Health Journalism Fellows, "It is not smart to take a cockroach out of an ear and just send that child home," Manchanda says.</p>

<p>Mental health professionals say that journalists need to get informed and be open to talking about how their work affects their mental health. This week at&nbsp;<em>Career GPS</em>, we get that conversation going.</p>

<p>Last week in <em>Career GPS</em>, the <em>ReportingonHealth</em> community shared its best health media in 2010. This week, we're highlighting awards to celebrate that work.</p>