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Simple and interactive guides to the health-care reform bill

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

The recently passed health-care reform bill is a landmark piece of legislation, but understanding how it affects individual Americans can be tough. Instead of just giving readers a broad overview of how the bill affects them, several news organizations created interactive guides that allow readers to input or select information about themselves and understand what part of the health-care reform bill applies to them.


The Washington Post





The New York Times





CNN




The Times and The Post use a flowchart and an input form, respectively, to provide insight into the bill. CNN uses a photo slideshow, an online journalism standby, to illustrate the intricacies of the bill.

News audiences not only want to know how the bill affects them, but also how their legislator voted. Some news media created visualizations that explain how people voted, which for visual learners functions much better than a simple list.


Sacramento Bee





The New York Times




The Times visualizes House votes on the bill several different ways. There are bar charts, a map, and traditional lists all on one page.

In a forehead smacking, "why didn't I think of that" move, ProPublica created a side-by-side comparison of the House and Senate versions of the health care bill.



Finally, The New York Times puts health care reform in context with an interactive timeline of the history of health care in America.



The interesting thing about the health-care reform bill is while the outcome of the bill was up in the air, the legislation dominated the news for weeks, giving news organizations plenty of time to form a multimedia or interactive strategy. Yet, most of the subsequent online coverage, save for the above examples, were text stories and links.

If a big story is about to break and you have resources you can dedicate to making your online coverage more interesting, you should always do so.


Also on 10,000 Words:

Do you have a multimedia emergency plan?
How news media are covering Haiti using multimedia, social networks
How news media covered the 2008 presidential inauguration

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2 Comments



Anonymous Anonymous Says:    
What ProPublica did is quite good, although I prefer what the Times did here http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2010/03/19/us/politics/20100319-health-care-reconciliation.html It actually explains what those changes mean in a fairly accessible language.

March 24, 2010 1:23 PM


Blogger Lorena Says:    
Thanks for the list! We actually used the links in a "related resources" box on an article for our in-house news website. I'm sure our specialized audience (faculty, staff and students at a public university) will find it useful.

March 26, 2010 10:34 AM


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