2019 Impact Fund

The USC Center for Health Journalism 2019 Impact Fund provided reporting support to journalists who think big and want to make a difference in California communities. We welcomed applications from journalists or newsrooms that want to tackle ambitious investigative or explanatory projects – by themselves, as a newsroom-wide undertaking or as a collaboration with other media outlets in their communities. 

The Fund invited proposals that illuminate our national and state debates on health care policy, the impact of ongoing or proposed changes to the social safety net and the health of underserved communities. It helped journalists bring untold stories to light and to investigate promising approaches to chronic ills. Projects had to focus on California health issues and be published or broadcast either by a California media outlet or a national outlet with a substantial California audience.

Explorations could range from a look at environmental conditions where people live and work to the impact of race and ethnicity on health, or how poverty and education can shape wellbeing. We were especially interested in investigative or explanatory reporting projects that advance public understanding and health policy for underserved or vulnerable populations, which could include people living in low-income neighborhoods, rural areas, prisons, foster homes, juvenile detention centers or homeless encampments.

The Fund aims to advance what the Center for Health Journalism calls “impact journalism,” which marries powerful narratives, data and community engagement to serve as a catalyst for change. The deadline to apply is October 16, 2020. In both 2018 and 2019, the Fund awarded reporting grants of up to $10,000 each to support health projects put forward by individual reporters, intra-newsroom teams and multiple newsroom collaboratives.  Click here to read about the 2019 Impact Fund grantees and their projects. Click here to read about the 2018 Impact Fund grantees and find links to their projects

Depending on the scope of the project, competitively selected grantees receive grant funds of $2,000 to $10,000. We also provided six months of mentoring while grantees worked on their projects, providing guidance on everything from story development to mapping out how to tackle reporting, to ways to improve storytelling.
 
The 2018, 2019 and 2020 Impact Fund grants were made possible thanks to the generous support of The California Wellness Foundation. In 2019, with support from the California Health Care Foundation, the Impact Fund also supported a news collaborative reporting together on the state's uninsured. The project is called "Uncovered California."