Thursday, September 20, 2012
First Steps in the realm of investigative journalism
Sagar Atre
Reporting Intern, Healthcare
ProPublica, New York
Recipient of John R Wilhelm Foreign Correspondence Internship, 2012
M.S. Journalism, E.W. Scripps School of Journalism
Being an investigative journalist is a tough job,
and completely without the glamor until your story creates a big splash. Even then,
the next story is also another rather rigorous investigation before it goes
live. Investigative journalism is probably deemed to be the most interesting
and valuable, but the work done by an investigative journalist rarely comes to
the fore. Only a few investigative journalists ever catch public attention,
others are silent guardians, tirelessly working to expose problems and
anomalies in the system. The only thing sustaining them is the overwhelming
evidence that they are doing good. As my first month at ProPublica as a
healthcare reporting intern draws to a close, I see this as a vital takeaway during
my time here.
ProPublica is a serious organization, working
against the tide in a time when the media is getting shallower, and stories are
pandering more to the needs of the market and advertisers than the needs of
societal needs. ProPublica journalists sometimes don’t seem to be journalists,
they seem to be an investigative committee investigating the many wrongs
happening in American society and government today. They study huge amounts of
documents which are almost always available, accessible and readable, to get a
story which is powerful to rock the most dominating centers of power in the
country; governmental organizations, large corporate houses, and even
presidential campaigns (whose funding is one major ongoing investigation right
now).
The project I am working on is a major project on
healthcare which ProPublica is doing. It is a project investigating patient
safety and medical errors in American hospitals. My work is a mixed bag of
doing background research for the project, speaking to researchers about some
topics in medicine and eventually, writing blog posts for the newly launched
page of the patient safety project. ProPublica seems to have a very different
environment when compared to the conventional news-based journalism
organization, the journalists are not always in a frantic hurry, there is no
ticking clock which everyone is nervous of, and the flurry of the day does not
rise as the day progresses. There are no last minute additions, no cut-throat
deadlines, and the atmosphere in the office is a mixed one of composed silence
tinged with some polite humor. Unlikely, we feel, for a top notch news
organization that has won two Pulitzers in a span of four years.
The pressures at ProPublica are different. Here, the
race is not for speed, but for quality. Every word in a ProPublica story which
says something meaningful has to be documented, backed by rock-solid evidence
and substantiated through credible sources. This does not always mean sources,
it means studying a lot of documentation and bringing evidence to the story
which usually few people have looked at. This sometimes means that reporters
are working on stories for weeks at a time, poring over documents over mugs of
coffee, huddled in meetings with their editors who demand highly from their reporters.
This is a new environment for me to work in as a young journalist.
The reputation
of journalism as a high-octane profession is somewhat negated when someone sees
ProPublica working, but it is a different kind of rush, a rush when you pore
through a hundred pages and find something significant hidden away in a report
or research many pages long. Journalists at ProPublica are seekers of deep
truths; secrets hidden below the daily facts of news happening across the
country. It’s a different kind of journalism, exhausting, time-consuming, but
highly interesting and exciting. Work at ProPublica has changed my impression
and beliefs about the power of journalism. It is a profession whose power can
be incessantly magnified if done right, and at ProPublica, I hope to learn how
it can be used as a powerful tool for change.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
1 comment:
its a good thing that journalists are more engaged to do research and investigation in the field of patient safety and medical errors in American hospitals. I also had the same but the difference was im on the field of medical malpractice lawyer arizona that are incharge for their patients only and not as the hospital as a whole.
Post a Comment