Insights

You learn a lot when you spend months reporting on a given issue or community, as our fellows can attest. Whether you’re embarking on a big new story or seeking to go deeper on a given issue, it pays to learn from those who’ve already put in the shoe leather and crunched the data. In these essays and columns, our community of journalists steps back from the notebooks and tape to reflect on key lessons, highlight urgent themes, and offer sage advice on the essential health stories of the day. 

Author(s)
By Danielle Ivory

<p>Health reform will greatly expand the existing Medicaid program to provide health care to millions more Americans below the poverty line. It seems like a good idea on its face, but under the current system, patients covered by Medicaid generally are the unhealthiest people in the country. It's a case where having insurance coverage does not necessarily mean that you have access to good care.</p><p>It begs the question: If we add more people to an already overloaded system, will this exacerbate existing problems?</p>

Author(s)
By Mary Otto

<p>It has been more than three years since my first report on the death of a homeless Maryland boy from complications of an untreated dental infection was published in The Washington Post.&nbsp; It was challenging and heartbreaking to write about the death of that gentle boy who I had gotten to know, along with his struggling mother in the last weeks of his life. Yet for me, the larger challenge of understanding the broken oral health care system in Maryland only began with that story.

Author(s)
By Alicia DeLeon-Torres

<p>It's been 2 weeks since the National Health Journalism Fellowship Convening 2010. &nbsp;I've felt a burst of renewed energy since meeting and bonding with my fellow fellows and WONDERFUL presenters. &nbsp;I feel blessed to have been chosen to be part of such an esteemed group!&nbsp;</p>

Author(s)
By Alison Knezevich

<p class="MsoNormal">My project will explore how prescription drug abuse has changed West Virginia's communities and why it is such a hard problem to control. As a daily newspaper reporter, I've seen this issue from several angles and am excited to examine it in depth.</p>

Author(s)
By Daniela Velazquez

<p>I'm honored to be a part of this year's fellows. I learned a lot during our week in Los Angeles and hope to apply that knowledge to my multimedia project. I will be looking at the obstacles that keep some in the lower-income communties of color in Tampa from developing healthy diet and exercise habits.</p>

Author(s)
By Frank Sotomayor

<p>A wide disparity exists between the large number of people on transplant lists, waiting for vital organs, such as a kidney, liver, heart, lung or pancreas, and the limited availability of those organs. Why is that? And can anything be done to close the imbalance? For my project in the National Health Journalism Fellowship program, I'm delving into the subject of organ donation. My geographic focus will be the Greater Los Angeles region. Given the demographic diversity of this region, I will concentrate on organ donation among Latinos, African Americans, Asians and Native Americans.

Author(s)
By Elizabeth Simpson

<p>I'm in the most recent round of national health fellows, which means I just returned from a terrific week in Los Angeles. I loved my fellow fellows! Also full to the brim with new story ideas and resources.&nbsp;Now back to the&nbsp;world of&nbsp;daily journalism, where I've been&nbsp;writing about&nbsp;researchers from our local medical school who helped&nbsp;develop a microbicide that women can use to block the AIDS virus, hospital mergers and a profile on a&nbsp;trauma surgeon.&nbsp;</p>

Author(s)
By Linda Perez

<p>A group of 30 end-stage renal patients of Grady Memorial Hospital, in Atlanta, face death as their dialysis treatment is scheduled to be cut soon. Many of these patients are undocumented Latino immigrants who do not have insurance and do not qualify for public benefits. Their immigration status has been a barrier to find alternative care and they are running out of options.</p>

Author(s)
By Carol Smith

<p>I am very excited to be a part of this year's National Health Fellowship program and to be embarking on the reporting for my fellowship project. My goal is to&nbsp;take&nbsp;a look at the health of the communities that live and work along the Duwamish River in Seattle. The Duwamish is not only Seattle’s only river, and the original home of its first Native American people, it is now also an industrial waterway&nbsp;classified as one of the nation’s worst toxic waste sites and one of the few federal Superfund cleanup sites in the country to bisect a major urban area.</p>

Author(s)
By Barbara Feder Ostrov

<p>Here’s what we’re reading today:</p> <p><strong>Hawking Health Reform:</strong> &nbsp;Actor Andy Griffith, best known for Matlock and The Andy Griffith Show, has been hired by the federal government <a href="http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5iL5vrJzaGazCoG8K0Qc6E… pitch seniors on the merits of health reform</a>. A national ad will air on the Weather Channel, Hallmark and other channels older folks like. (Thanks to <a href="http://gawker.com/">Gawker</a&gt; for this one).</p>