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>In 2008, Henry Schuster was "the new guy" at <em>60 Minutes</em>. Everyone else at the show had already taken the big interviews, the politicians and bigwigs who would be at the center of many reports. So Schuster took a different approach: "I would rather set the table for our viewers by addressing the issue, not the candidates," Schuster told the 2009 <a href="http://www.reportingonhealth.org/fellowships/seminars/california-health… Health Journalism Fellows</a> at this evening's keynote address. "We wanted to do a health care story."<br />

<p>In 2003, Oakland, California, was one of the most dangerous cities in America. The <em>Oakland Tribune</em> ran a static map with thumbnail photos of victims overlayed on a map of the city. Sean Connelly, journalist and photographer, visited victims' families, but even for him, the real people involved were becoming a blur.</p>

<p>From the <a href="/blogs/health-not-just-health-care-says-fellowship-seminars-keynote-speaker">opening keynote</a> of this week's National Health Journalism Fellowship seminar, prevention and health beyond just health care have been common themes. Today's afternoon panelists gave examples of programs that take simple, novel approaches to integrating physical activity into people's daily lives.</p><p><b>Take a Walk</b></p>

<p>Stan Dorn, senior research associate at the Urban Institute, says that in the game of health care reform legislation, "We are in the playoffs."</p><p>The players are largely Democrats and the few Republicans who are not opposing reforms outright. Here is a roundup of the agreements and debates in Washington, D.C., as well as a few story ideas, which Dorn outlined in this morning's seminar with the <a href="/fellowships/seminars/national-health-journalism">National Health Journalism Fellows</a>.</p>

<p>Behind the construction projects surrounding the Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles, affordable housing is hard to come by. There were three apartment buildings in the block just north of the stadium, between Georgia and Figueroa Streets, but in the last year, tenants from two of the buildings were forced to move when the buildings were condemned. <a href="http://articles.latimes.com/2009/apr/26/local/me-landlord26">Which appears to be just fine by owner, Frank McHugh</a>.

<p>The National Health Journalism Fellows will take a tour of the varied landscapes of Downtown Los Angeles this afternoon. Their guides, Sandra McNeill, Executive Director of the Figueroa Corridor Community Land Trust, and Roberto Bustillo, a tenant organizer for Strategic Actions for a Just Economy (SAJE), say that the much lauded revitalization projects are exacerbating problems faced by long-time tenants in the area.</p>

<p><em>The New York Times</em> reported in September that <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/26/us/26domestic.html">domestic violence programs in the state of California have have been largely eliminated</a>. The Domestic Violence Program's last $16 million was cut completely in July, in efforts to close a near $24 billion state budget deficit.</p><p>Violence is a public health problem, said Eve F. Sheedy, Deputy City Attorney, Domestic Violence Legislative and Policy Advisor in the Los Angeles City Attorney's Office. It matters to public health that these resources have been cut.</p>

<p>The <a href="/fellowships/seminars/national-health-journalism">National Health Journalism</a> seminar begins on Sunday, when 15 National Health Journalism fellowship recipients (and five <a href="/fellowships/seminars/dennis-hunt-fund-health-journalism">Dennis A.

<p><a href="/users/isabelle">Isabelle Walker</a> says that it is important to get beyond just the emergency room stories and look at longer trends, something difficult to do if you are not dedicated to the field.</p>