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 Shuka Kalantari

As Congress considers a major overhaul of the U.S. health care system, Health Dialogues examines how the new state budget will affect health care closer to home. Will kids in low income families be able to get basic services? What about drug treatment programs mandated by Proposition 36? And how may where you live affect the care you'll get?

Healthy Families Long-Term Stability in Question: Find out what it's like to be a 15 year-old girl without health insurance, as Health Dialogues hears from one of nearly 80,000 children on the Healthy Families waiting list backlog.

Author(s)
By Andy Hall

<p>Here's a quick description of my fellowship project:</p><p>The working title is "Unequal care: An investigation of health-care disparities in Wisconsin." By many measures, Wisconsin residents enjoy some of the best health care in America. The state was ranked ninth in the Commonwealth Fund's 2007 State Scorecard on Health System Performance, which "assesses state variation across key dimensions of health system performance: access, quality, avoidable hospital use and costs, equity, and healthy lives."</p>

Author(s)
By Jeff Kelly Lowenstein

Reading some books is like feeling a cool breeze wash over you on a sun-dappled beach as waves gently lap nearby.

The whole effect is soothing, restorative, healing.

But then there are other books which grab you with an urgency the way your mother’s voice called you by your full name when you were in trouble.

Author(s)
By Celeste Fremon

<p>Although gangs and gang violence have been reconceived in recent years as a public health problem requiring systemic cures---there is far less agreement on what those cures might be. While transforming the community conditions that produce gang violence is the purported goal for policy makers in Los Angeles, there is little consensus about what strategy or group of strategies are best suited to achieve this goal.</p>

Author(s)
By Rong Xiaoqing

<p>Hi all,</p><p>

Here is a basic outline of my project that I’d like to share with you guys. The project is consisted of three separated stories about health issues in the Asian Community.</p><p>

1. Domestic violence against seniors in the Chinese Community.</p>

Author(s)
By William Heisel

<p>Even in his infamy, Dr. Daniel Carlat, founder of <a href="http://www.thecarlatreport.com/"><i>The Carlat Psychiatry Report</i></a>, is popular with drug companies. Carlat was <a href="http://www.rhapsody.com/player?type=undefined&amp;id=alb.27747126&amp;r… recently</a> by <a href="http://carlatpsychiatry.blogspot.com/2009/09/schering-plough-committed-…; to help promote a new drug.

Author(s)
By William Heisel

<p>A reporter gets a call from the hypothetical Council for Making Sick Kids Smile about an event being sponsored on an otherwise sleepy Sunday. The reporter heads out to the event, hoping for a quick local page filler, and comes back to the newsroom with a great-sounding story with quotes from a well-spoken university professor and a teary mom and a photo of a sick and smiling child holding balloons nuzzling with a baby koala bear.</p>

<p>What reporters in this situation rarely ask is: who founded this council and why?</p>