Emily Morgan (journalist)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Born at Banbury in Oxfordshire, Emily Morgan was the second of three daughters of an agricultural consultant and grew up in the village of Little Compton. Her younger sister is Polly Morgan, taxidermist / artist. She was educated at Sibford School, studied theatre with culture and communication at Lancaster University, and earned a postgraduate degree in journalism at the University of Central Lancashire.[1]
Career
Morgan began her career in 2001 creating and reading news bulletins at Independent Radio News. She subsequently became a producer under ITV's political editor Tom Bradby and then an on-camera news reporter, covering Wales and the West of England and then becoming a political correspondent.[1][3] In 2012, she reported on the disappearance of April Jones for ITV.[4]
As ITV News' health and science editor, Morgan led the network's coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom,[5] including the first reporting from inside an acute COVID ward, at the Royal Bournemouth Hospital in 2020,[1] the controversy about PPE contracts, and Long Covid.[2] Her last story was on patients paying for private health care because of long waiting lists at the NHS, and she had also recently begun reporting on climate change, for example in March 2023 on victims of the 2022 Pakistan floods still living with high water.[1]