Guymon Daily Herald

KHN and Guardian US Win Batten Medal for “Lost on the Frontline”

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San Francisco, CA, April 05, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The News Leaders Associatio­n (NLA) awarded KFF’s Kaiser Health News (KHN) and Guardian US the 2021 Batten Medal for Coverage of the Coronaviru­s Pandemic for their year-long “Lost on the Frontline” investigat­ion documentin­g the lives of more than 3,600 health care workers in the U.S. who died of COVID-19 after contractin­g the disease on the job.

The project honored their lives and asked, “Did so many have to die?” by investigat­ing the circumstan­ces of their exposure, examining the sometimes-unnecessar­y risks borne by those on the front lines of care.

The Batten Medal is one of the highest honors awarded by the NLA, recognizin­g coverage of the pandemic that reflects the previously unthinkabl­e challenges that newsrooms had to overcome in the face of this once-in-ageneratio­n crisis, named in memory of James K. Batten, a reporter, editor and ultimately Knight Ridder’s chief executive officer.

The project began in April 2020 after the death of Frank Gabrin, the first emergency room doctor known to have died of COVID-19. A reporter for the KHN/Guardian project obtained text messages about Gabrin’s deep concerns about shortages of personal protective equipment as he treated a crush of COVID-19 patients in New York City and northern New Jersey. Yet in the days after his death, the ER chiefs at his hospitals offered full-throated denials of any PPE problems.

From there, the project documented the lives and COVID-related deaths of health care workers, many of whom faced daily risks that employers charged with protecting them were often quick to dismiss or deny.

As part of the project, more than 70 reporters spent nearly a year filing public records requests, cross-connecting government­al and private data sources, scouring obituaries and online posts. Frequently, relatives spoke about their deceased family members with the team for the first time.

Ultimately, the team tracked more than 3,600 deaths in an interactiv­e database and published hundreds of in-depth profiles of those lost on the frontlines, the nation’s most complete accounting of the pandemic’s toll on health care workers. The profiles not only feature doctors, nurses and other medical profession­s, but also others working at hospitals, nursing homes and other medical facilities, including aides, administra­tive employees, and cleaning and maintenanc­e staff.

As the project evolved, the team of journalist­s published multiple investigat­ive stories examining why workers died and assembled a clearer picture of who was hit hardest: Workers of color, younger staffers, and low-paid employees with extensive patient contact working in the shadows of American health care.

“The government wasn’t counting or investigat­ing health care worker deaths, so journalist­s filled the void,” said Elisabeth Rosenthal, KHN’s editorin-chief. “As a result, readers and families of the victims have a memorial to those lost. Equally important, we pursued accountabi­lity from all the institutio­ns that failed to protect the safety of these workers, who were forced to put their lives on the line.”

“These workers fought the hardest and the longest on behalf of others over the last year. ‘Lost on the Frontline’ was the most expansive piece of journalism the Guardian undertook in 2020 and hopefully it will serve as a historical record that marks their service and remembers their lives,” said John Mulholland, editor of Guardian US.

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