Grants and Contracts Details
Description
Institute for Rural Journalism
and Community Issues
School of Journalism and Media
www.RuralJournalism.org
The Institute for Rural Journalism and Community Issues greatly appreciates the opportunity to continue our work to
increase awareness of, and to address, the systemic issues that contribute to the poor health status of Kentuckians,
and to develop leadership in journalistic coverage of health issues in all areas of the state.
We propose the following grant activities:
1. Journalism: Write, edit, post and update as necessary at least 650 blog items and 100 original stories on
Kentucky Health News, to be done by the Institute director, an experienced health writer working 20 to 30
hours a week, or occasionally a freelance journalist.
2. Promotion: Send to all Kentucky newspapers at least a weekly update of stories published on KHN in the
previous week, with additional updates during the week as warranted. Items of national interest will also be
published on The Rural Blog, another Institute publication.
3. Presentation: Regularly update the KHN blog, WordPress site and Facebook page with significant stories of
urgent or lasting interest. This work will be done by the director, the health writer or the part-time staff
assistant for the Institute for Rural Journalism and Community Issues.
4. Development: We will continue to seek other funding and partnerships for Kentucky Health News, which
may come in the form of advertising, sponsorships or graduate-student support, perhaps for initiatives to
expand reporting on specific issues, such as the coronavirus pandemic and rural hospitals.
5. Research: Make periodic examinations of rural newspapers and other news outlets in Kentucky, to spot
trends in news coverage, find stories for possible excerption in KHN, and continue our research on the
publication of health news, with particular attention to the annual County Health Rankings. If the findings
warrant, we will prepare a research paper for publication in a peer-reviewed academic journal.
6. Cooperation: Work with the Foundation to develop story ideas, research topics, other initiatives and outside
funding for them; include newsworthy Foundation activities in Institute publications and social media, and
promote Foundation activities that are beneficial to rural journalists and rural health.
7. Participation: Attend seminars, workshops, conferences and other events related to rural health, and report
on them if newsworthy; at such events, advocate the role of rural journalism in improving rural health.
8. Extension: Engage with Kentucky newspaper editors to discuss and encourage health coverage; and work
with Family and Consumer Sciences specialists, Agricultural Communications staff and other units of the
UK College of Agriculture, Food and Environment in order to mutually enhance our work in promoting
better health throughout the commonwealth.
Status | Finished |
---|---|
Effective start/end date | 5/1/22 → 4/30/23 |
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