Little Knowlege and Limited Practice: Emergency Contraceptive Pills
- Report: Little Knowledge and Limited Practice: Emergency Contraceptive Pills, the Public, and the Ob-Gyn
The independent source for health policy research, polling, and news.
State Responses to New Federal Health Programs
This side-by-side provides a comparison of the Medicaid provisions in the House and Senate versions of the Balanced Budget Act of 1997 with current law.
Contraception in the 90’s: Which Methods Are Most Widely Used? And, Who Uses What?
A fact sheet and resource list on new contraceptive use data from the 1995 National Survey of Family Growth (NSFG) from a briefing on the topic held in New York City on June 20, 1997. Contraception In The 90s: Which Methods Are Most Widely Used?And, Who Uses What? was co-sponsored by the Kaiser Family Foundation, the National Press Foundation and The Alan Guttmacher Institute, as part of an ongoing briefing series for journalists on reproductive health issues: Emerging Issues in Reproductive Health. The NSFG is based on interviews with more than 10,000 women across the country, and is the nation’s most comprehensive source of information on women’s reproductive and sexual health behavior, including sexual activity, pregnancy, infertility and contraceptive use.
1997 Kaiser Media Fellows Selected
For Immediate Release: June 5, 1997Contacts: Tina Hoff — (415) 854-9400 ext. 108
Menlo Park, California — Six journalists have been selected as 1997 Kaiser Media fellows, in the fifth year of an annual fellowship program for health reporters sponsored by the Kaiser Family Foundation. The journalists, whose selection was announced today, will start their fellowships projects in September 1997.
1997 Kaiser Media fellows:
Debra Gordon, medical writer, The Virginian-Pilot
Jon Hamilton, freelance health policy writer
Leslie Laurence, syndicated health columnist, and writer, Glamour magazine
Christopher Ringwald, demographics/mental health reporter, The (Albany) Times Union
Joanne Silberner, health policy correspondent, National Public Radio
Tammie Smith, health reporter, The Tennessean
The Kaiser Media Fellowships Program provides health journalists with a highly flexible range of opportunities to pursue in-depth projects related to health policy, healthcare financing and public health issues. There is no obligation to be based at an academic institution, and no bar on fellows continuing to report for publication or TV/radio production during their fellowship.
The Program gives fellows time and travel opportunities to research specific topics, to broaden their perspectives, and deepen understanding of health policy, health financing and public health issues. The purpose is to help journalists improve the quality of the work they do–to enhance their ability to explain the complex ethical, economic, medical and political aspects involved in their reporting on health issues.
In addition to working on their individual projects, fellows meet as a group five times during the year and participate in a series of program seminars and site visits, in part designed by the fellows. These vary widely in focus, location and in the range of participants. In January 1997, the current fellows met for a three-day program on computer-assisted health reporting at the Poynter Institute, followed by a four-day sitevisit to Miami with briefings on various immigration and public health issues. The next fellowship site visit in August 1997 to Portland, Oregon, will focus on longterm care and end-of life issues.
Fellows are awarded a basic stipend of $45,000 for a twelve-month period, plus travel expenses. In 1998, six fellowships will again be awarded to print, television, and radio health reporters, commentators, editors and producers. Applications for 1998 will be available shortly, for submission by March 1998. For further information, or to apply for the 1998 awards, contact Penny Duckham, executive director of the fellowships program, at the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, 2400 Sand Hill Road, Menlo Park, CA 94025 (Tel: 415-854-9400; fax: 415-854-4800; e-mail: pduckham@kff.org).
The Kaiser Family Foundation is an independent health care foundation and is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente or Kaiser Industries.
Kaiser Media Fellows
Fellows are selected by a national advisory committee:
Hale Champion (chair)
Paul Delaney
Anne Gudenkauf
Timothy Johnson, M.D.
Eileen Shanahan
1996 Media Fellows
Lisa Aliferis, producer, KPIX-TV (San Francisco)
Susan FitzGerald, medical writer, The Philadelphia Inquirer
Samuel Orozco, news/satellite director, Radio Bilingue
Eugene Richards, photo-journalist and author
Joseph P. Shapiro, senior editor, U.S. News & World Report
Mark Taylor, health reporter, Post-Tribune (Gary, Indiana)
1995 Media Fellows
Chris Adams, reporter, The Times-Picayune (New Orleans)
Leon Dash, reporter, The Washington Post
Jonathan Freedman, author, columnist; regular contributor, Los Angeles Times Commentary Page
Judith Graham, business writer, The Denver Post
Lani Luciano, staff writer, Money magazine
Patricia Neighmond, health policy correspondent, National Public Radio
1994 Media Fellows
Jeanne Blake, documentary producer and author
Janet Firshein, Editor, Medicine & Health
Carol Gentry, medical writer, St. Petersburg Times
Angela Mitchell, freelance writer and author
Rita Rubin, associate editor, U.S. News & World Report
Steve Sternberg, freelance health policy writer
1993 Media Fellows
Lisa Belkin, healthcare reporter, The New York Times
Mary Flannery, health/medical reporter, The Philadelphia Daily News
Julie Kosterlitz, Contributing Editor, The National Journal
Linda Roach Monroe, health and medicine reporter, The Miami Herald
Rebecca Perl, science desk, National Public Radio
Stuart Schear, health/science reporter, The MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour
Preventing Unintended Pregnancies: The Cost-Effectiveness of Three Methods of Emergency Contraception
The June 1997 edition of the Kaiser Family Foundation/Harvard Health News Index includes questions about major health issues covered in the news,including questions about Late-Term Abortions, Sexual Activity among Teens and the Tobacco Industry. The survey is based on a national random sample of 1,202 Americans conducted from April 28 – June 8, 1997 which measures public knowledge of health stories covered in the news media during the previous month. The Health News Index is designed to help the news media and people in the health field gain a better understanding of which health stories in the news Americans are following and what they understand about those health issues. Every two months, Kaiser/Harvard issues a new index report.
A national random sample telephone survey of 700 regular ER viewers before and after the April 10th episode, featuring a date rape victim who learns that she still has contraceptive options to help prevent pregnancy, even after having unprotected sex. While in the emergency room, she learns that if she takes a heavy dose of regular birth control pills within three days of unprotected sex, she can reduce her chance of becoming pregnant by 75%. The survey was conducted to find out if watching the show made any difference in their awareness of emergency contraception.
A Review of the Waiver Applications, Letters of Approval and Special Terms and Conditions
This background paper provides a summary of the key features of the Medicaid 1115 waivers that have been approved, proposed, implemented and conditionally rejected. This July version updates Medicaid 1115 Demonstration Waivers: Approved and Proposed Activities as of February 1995, as well as policy briefs on Medicaid waivers released in August and November of 1994.