Now on ScienceBlogs: Rhodes Secretary: Wall Street Megabonuses Draining Our Young Talent

Seed Media Group

Collective Imagination

Search

Profile

headshotbioE.jpg bioephemera is art + biology - everything from representations of science in art and literature to the neuroscience of aesthetics.

read the first BioE post
visit the old BioE archive

Note: the contents of this blog are the personal opinions of the author, independent of any organizations with which she is affiliated, and should not be construed as professional advice.

Currently Reading


bioephemeral sampler

Recent Comments

Recent Posts

Shiny Objects


00ootssoeraaapsmall.jpg
thinkingbloggerpf8.jpg
intellectual-blogger-award-small-thumb.jpg
excellentblog.jpg

My Amazon.com Wish List

Categories

Archives

Blogroll

« The squirrelbeast is ready for its closeup | Main | Delicate and lethal »

Visualizing health care data: plain language, intuitive videos

Category: BlogosphereScience in Culture & PolicyScience journalismWeb 2.0, New Media, and Gadgets
Posted on: September 6, 2009 8:46 AM, by Jessica Palmer

Picture 10.png

The editors of the Columbia Journalism Review weigh in on the media's uneven treatment of the health care debate:

So far this year 55 percent of coverage of health care has been about the political battles, 16 percent about the protests, and only 8 percent about substantive issues like how the system works now, what will happen if it remains unchanged, and what proposed changes will mean for ordinary people.

To help reporters understand and analyze the debate, The Commonwealth Fund has sponsored a special supplement to the September/October issue of the Columbia Journalism Review.

Supposedly this supplement (download pdf) is for reporters, but it's certainly accessible enough for pretty much anyone. The Commonwealth Fund, a nonprofit health care think tank, does have an agenda - it released its own 90-page report on how health care ought to be reformed last spring - but this supplement is a well-referenced compilation of real numbers, for a conversation that rarely gets past yelling and name-calling to evidence.

Even better are these videos from Main Sequence, ("music, science, experiments") showing in a completely intutitive manner how health care spending is largely decoupled from outcomes:

The video is by Peter Aldhous, Jim Giles and MacGregor Campbell and can also be found at the New Scientist. There's also an interactive graph visualizing the rather dry OECD healthcare data from 1960 to 2007 , complete with tutorial on using the interface.

Good stuff - and proof that there is added value in multimedia visualization techniques. Campbell's old teacher Thomas Levenson had this to say:

These two interactives on health care [are] fine examples of why the web is a better delivery vehicle for mildly-enhanced prose than dead trees. There is a reason traditional newspapers/magazines are bound for dodo-land, and it isn't just MSM self-regard and feckless business decisions; the digital domain lets you do new, useful, sometimes transformative stuff with the material that is at the heart of the mission of traditional media: provide information within an apparatus that actually enhances a reader's ability to understand what the writer is going on about.

We need more information presented this way.

Share this: Stumbleupon Reddit Email + More

TrackBacks

TrackBack URL for this entry: http://scienceblogs.com/mt/pings/119275

Post a Comment

(Email is required for authentication purposes only. On some blogs, comments are moderated for spam, so your comment may not appear immediately.)





ScienceBlogs

Search ScienceBlogs:

Go to:

Advertisement
Enter to win a free copy of The Monty Hall Problem
Visit the Collective Imagination blog
Advertisement
Collective Imagination

© 2006-2009 Seed Media Group LLC. ScienceBlogs is a registered trademark of Seed Media Group. All rights reserved.

Sites by Seed Media Group: Seed Media Group | ScienceBlogs | SEEDMAGAZINE.COM