Lucy Johnston
Born1969
NationalityBritish
OccupationJournalist
Years activeSince 1992
EmployerThe Sunday Express
Known forInvestigative journalism, part of the original editorial team of The Big Issue
AwardsGenesis Award, 2001

Lucy Johnston (born 1969) is a British journalist, currently health editor of the Sunday Express, and previously a staff reporter and investigative journalist for The Observer.

Johnston was a member of the original editorial team of The Big Issue in 1992. She has become known for her investigative articles on London's drug culture, deaths in police custody, animal research, and the pharmaceutical industry, and for her campaigns to improve healthcare provision to the elderly and mentally ill.

Education and career

Johnston was educated at Culford School in Bury St Edmunds. She moved to London in 1992 to work as a volunteer for The Big Issue, becoming a reporter with the newspaper's original editorial team, before working her way up to news editor, then assistant editor. She was known from then until 1996 for several investigative pieces, including on deaths in police custody and street drugs in London.[1]

Tessa Swithinbank writes that Johnston was headhunted by The Observer in 1996 as a result of her ability to work with the kinds of sources few journalists were able to access.[1] After several years with The Observer as a staff reporter, she joined the Sunday Express investigations team in 2001, later becoming health editor. She has conducted undercover investigations for the newspaper, including one in 2001 where she took a job as a care assistant in Lynde House, a nursing home owned by Westminster Health Care, which was headed by Chai Patel. Her story was highly critical of the treatment the elderly residents were receiving; Patel, at the time a government adviser on care of the elderly, later sold the company and resigned from his government post.[2] She has also campaigned in the Express to highlight the treatment of people with mental-health problems, and has written articles opposing the requirement that pensioners pay for medical treatment while in nursing homes.[3]

Reception

Johnston won a commendation in 1998 from the Natali Prize for Journalism, awarded by the International Federation of Journalists, for "Barred from animals' kingdom," an article in The Observer on the conflict over land rights in northern Tanzania between the Maasai people and the establishment of the Mkomazi National Park, a conservation area for animals.[4]

In 2001 she and a colleague, Jonathan Calvert, won a Genesis Award from the Humane Society of the United States for a Daily Express article, "Terrible despair of animals cut up in name of research," on xenotransplantation experiments conducted by Imutran and Huntingdon Life Sciences.[5] Johnston was shortlisted that year for a "Journalist of the Year" award by Mind, the mental-health charity, and in 2012 the Sunday Express won Mind's "Making a difference award" for its "Crusade for Better Mental Health" campaign, with the work of Johnston and a colleague, Ted Jeory, highlighted in the citation.[6]

An article by Johnston in the Sunday Express that was critical of the cervical cancer vaccine, Cervarix, was the subject of a complaint to the Press Complaints Commission in 2009. The newspaper published a correction and apology.[7]

Selected works

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Swithinbank, Tessa. Coming Up from the Streets: The Story of The Big Issue. Earthscan, 2001, pp. 51, 70, 74, 96, 258.
  2. Johnston, Lucy. "Shame care tsar to run 250 homes", Sunday Express, 31 July 2011.
  3. For example, see:
  4. "Previous Natali Prize winners" Archived 30 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine, International Federation of Journalists, 14 October 2002.
    • "'Barred from animal kingdom'", Tanzanian Affairs, 1 May 1997.
    • For an extract from Johnston's article, see Brockington, Dan. Fortress Conservation: The Preservation of the Mkomazi Game Reserve, Tanzania. Indiana University Press, 2002, p. 116.
  5. "2001 Genesis Awards", Humane Society of the United States, 2001.
  6. "Evidence that media reporting of mental health issues is improving", Mind press release, 17 May 2001.
  7. Goldacre, Ben. "Cancer jab fantasy closes down a debate", The Guardian, 10 October 2009.

Further reading

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