Nick Vidinsky
KQED Social Media Producer
KQED Social Media Producer
I am currently a public radio and web producer with professional experience as a researcher, editor and producer for nationally distributed public radio programs. My professional interests include digital media production and strategy. I equally enjoy big-picture thinking and hands-on production. Personal sound production studio includes professional phone patch, 6-channel digital mixer, Adobe Audition, Adobe CS3, and FTP delivery capability. PC and Mac. Nick Vidinsky’s Specialties: Digital/social media strategy, field and studio production, reporting, voiceover, audio and video editing, tape synch, Flash, Audition, Photoshop, Dreamweaver, Final Cut, Pro Tools, Slide Show Pro, Sound Slides
<p>Producer Nick Vidinsky sits down with a group of students at the Phillip and Sala Burton High School in San Francisco, to talk about their hopes, their fears and their health. What are they concerned about, and to whom do they turn for help? Plus, hear what teens across California have to say about their own health and where they go for information.</p><p> </p>
<p>View our interactive charts showing 2008 <a href="http://www.kqed.org/assets/graph/hd-2008osha/" target="_blank" title="Cal-OSHA workplace deaths"> Cal/OSHA reported workplace deaths</a>. You can look at fatalities by industry, job, gender, cause of death and location.</p>
<p>View our interactive charts exploring health access statistics for immigrants, based on how long they have been in the United States. According to the data, immigrants who have been here for more than twenty years are most likely to see a doctor, yet are least likely to have a usual source for health care.
Click here to view chart:
<p>Studies have shown that breastfeeding significantly reduces health risks for babies and their mothers. So how many Californians are breastfeeding their babies? Not enough. See our interactive charts and sort the data by ethnicity, income and gender.
Visit Health Dialogues to view the graph:
http://www.kqed.org/assets/graph/breastfeeding/index.jsp</p>