Quality of Care, Reading Materials

Link opens in new windowWarp Speed Decisions About Websites

Internet users can give websites a thumbs up or thumbs down in less than the blink of an eye, according to a study by Canadian researchers.

Link opens in new windowIs Your Project A

Andy Goodman gives tips for project promotion geared at telling a "good story" about your efforts. If you can't tell a good story about your work, how will you convince others of the news worthiness of your project?

Link opens in new windowReducing Poverty While Caring for the Environment

Dr. David Suzuki writes of alleviating poverty while improving the environment. Many of the world's poor heavily rely on natural resources yet they face tremendous outside economic pressures to behave in ways that are not good for the long-term health and productivity of the environment. He reports that a recent publication, "The Wealth of the Poor," says good environmental practices and policies can be wealth-producing.

Link opens in new windowRWJ Publications

The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation produces publications that are available at no cost on their Web site. A sampling of titles:
• A Nation at Risk: Obesity in the United States
• Active Living Diversity Project
• Dynamics of Race, Culture and Key Indicators of Health . . .
• Healthy Places, Healthy People: Promoting Public Health & Physical Activity through Community Design

Link opens in new windowDr. Jerald Winakur

Dr. Jerald Winakur, a geriatric practitioner, has written movingly about caring for his elderly father who suffers from dementia. On the NPR site you'll hear him talk to Terry Gross and find the link to the full essay in "Health Affairs."

Link opens in new windowDigital Storytelling by Third World Majority

Third World Majority is a media training and production resource center run by a collective of Filipino and Tamil women "dedicated to developing new media practices that affect global justice and social change through grassroots political organizing". TWM is working with Center for Reflective Community Practice at MIT to develop an on-line digital storytelling space. Highly recommended: their Digital Divide manifesto and story archive (story browsing hint: click on and take your pick). Their web URL says it all: "Culture Is A Weapon".

Link opens in new windowWhen Sources Become Friends and Vice Versa

Interesting summer reading turned up in a recent Poynter column on keeping roles straight if/when the relationship between journalists and their sources begins to evolve. This situation could pertain to small town or tribal journalists, or to reporters covering a beat where over time they might become closer to sources. As author O. Ricardo Pimentel writes, "...the truth is that both people in such a relationship should just lay their cards on the table. Get the ground rules straight...What we're trying to avoid here is any misunderstanding that will sour either a business relationship or a friendship. But both of you should be on the same page about whether it is one or the other." Read more on-line:

Link opens in new windowBarbara Jordan Health Policy Scholars Profiled

The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation established the Barbara Jordan Health Policy Scholars Program at Howard University to honor the legacy of former Foundation Trustee and Congresswoman Barbara Jordan and to expand the pool of students of color interested in the field of health policy. The Foundation has created a brochure highlighting the first five years of the Barbara Jordan Scholars Program and profiling the Scholars (college seniors) who have participated in it. Download the 56-page .pdf brochure on-line to see pictures and read more about each Scholar.

Link opens in new windowClass Matters

The New York Times has published a series of essays on class in America. The Web version includes plenty of multi-media presentation and resources for teachers and students. Of special interest to Sound Partners' colleagues may be the audio-visual essay of two New Yorkers each of whom had a heart attack in 2004. How they were treated and the story of their recoveries is told by the individuals involved. (Free, one-time registration required.)

Link opens in new windowTroublesome Trends in TV Health News

Local commercial television news has tremendous reach and potential impact on Americans. But the many Americans who get their health and medical news and information from local television news are receiving a distorted picture. Remedies for these ills are well within reach: training, more time, and more effort writes Gary Schwitzer, assistant professor at the School of Journalism and Mass Communication, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis.

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