The Lund Report Awarded Best On-Line Coverage

By: 
The Lund Report
The Lund Report
May 25, 2010 -- We’re pleased to announce The Lund Report took home six awards on Saturday at the Society of Professional Journalists’ Best Work of 2009 awards.
 
The Lund Report went up against non-daily newspapers with circulations under 8,000.
 
Topping the list of awards was Diane Lund-Muzikant’s first place in best on-line coverage for her story “Regence loses major public employee contract.”  Diane also took second place in the same category for “Counties embark on mental health pilot project.” 
 
David Rosenfeld earned two second place awards for comprehensive and spot news coverage for his stories on Health insurance rate regulation and “Police arrest twelve at Regence.” David also took third place for an investigative piece “Tensions rise over publicly disclosing superbug.” 
 

And Raymond Rendleman, who has since left us for a full-time gig at The Clackamas Review, won second place for “Primary care shortage reaches critical level.”

We can say confidently now that you, our readers, are receiving award winning journalism without having to pay a subscription fee. We rely on donations to bring you this Web site so please consider making a tax-deductible contribution today.

Also please consider joining our growing ranks of subscribers by  clicking here. That way you'll receive our weekly email alerts with the latest on Oregon healthcare news and be able to comment on our articles. Most of all, thanks for reading.



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Congratulations and "well-deserved" to Diane, David and Ray. You are a critical resource. Stay "in our faces" and keep coming back to the issues that must be made front and center. As one of the hospital executives in your other article this week said, this needs to be about "we" not "me," but so far we get a lot more "me" from individuals and institutions than we do "we." The Lund Report is one force behind facing the issues and getting more "we." Keep cheerleading what is good, naming and shaming what and who needs that, and bringing the discussion back to what matters for health--not money and health "care."

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