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The Study of Entertainment Media & Health

Generation M2: Media in the Lives of 8- to 18-Year-Olds
A national survey by the Kaiser Family Foundation found that with technology allowing nearly 24-hour media access as children and teens go about their daily lives, the amount of time young people spend with entertainment media has risen dramatically, especially among minority youth.

January 2011: Anticipating Children’s Media Policy in the Obama Era
The Kaiser Family Foundation and the American Center for Children and Media sponsored a roundtable discussion to focus on what proposals, policies or practices are likely to emerge during the Obama Administration concerning children’s media content and delivery.
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AIDS at 30: The U.S. Epidemic -- June 2011 Video/Audio
“AIDS at 30: The U.S. Epidemic” chronicles the thirty years since the first cases of a rare pneumonia found in young gay men were reported by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control.
Generation M2: Media in the Lives of 8- to 18-Year-Olds -- January 2010 Video/Audio
This national survey of children about their media use was released at an event in Washington, D.C. featuring the chairman of the Federal Communications Commission. A webcast is available.
Coverage of Health News, Jan–June 2009 -- July 2009
The Kaiser Family Foundation and the Pew Research Center’s Project for Excellence in Journalism conducted this study of how the U.S. news media covered health and health policy issues over a six-month period from January 2009 through June 2009.
Pulling it Together: About Kaiser Health News -- May 2009
In his latest essay for "Pulling It Together, From Drew Altman," the Foundation's President and CEO discusses the motivation behind launching Kaiser Health News, a new nonprofit health policy news service.
The Future of Health Care Journalism -- March 2009 Video/Audio
A new report examining the state of health care journalism and a survey of the members of the Association of Health Care Journalists were released at an event in Washington, D.C., discussing the future of health care journalism.
Health News Coverage in the U.S. Media -- November 2008
The Kaiser Family Foundation and the Pew Research Center’s Project for Excellence in Journalism conducted this study of how the U.S. news media covered health and health policy issues over an 18-month period from January 2007 through June 2008.
Wide-ranging Study of National News Reveals Health News Comprises Less Than Four Percent of All Coverage -- November 2008
Wide-ranging Study of National News Reveals Health News Comprises Less Than Four Percent of All Coverage
Hollywood & Health: Health Content in Entertainment Television -- September 2008 Video/Audio
Two reports document how well television viewers learn and retain health information from embedded content in an episode of Grey's Anatomy and measure how prevalent health content is in popular prime time entertainment shows.
Children’s Media Use and Sleep Problems: Issues and Unanswered Questions -- June 2008
This research brief examines different aspects of how media use may impact children's sleep. It reviews and summarizes the limited body of research on this topic and highlights key unanswered questions that emerge from the prior studies
Kaiser Fast Facts -- May 2008
“Kaiser Fast Facts” features “QuickTakes” and “Kaiser Slides” – two tools that provide direct access to facts, data and slides about the nation's health care system and programs, in an easy-to-use format. “QuickTakes” presents an inventory of facts-at-a-glance and "Kaiser Slides" allows Web visitors to freely view, download and print graphics and tables of health policy statistics and trends.
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Study of Media and Health

The Foundation conducts research concerning the relationship between entertainment media and health, with a special focus on children and media. The purpose of the research is to provide data to help inform policymakers, journalists, the research community, healthcare providers, the media industry, and the public.

Major research projects include such topics as how teens use the Internet for health information; the amount of time children of all ages spend watching TV, playing video games, using computers, and reading; sexual messages on television; how health policy issues are portrayed on TV's medical dramas; what viewers learn from health information in entertainment shows; the role of media in childhood obesity; and the impact of media-based public health campaigns. The Foundation also studies public policies on related media topics, including public service advertising on television, TV ratings, the V-Chip, and the impact of Internet filtering.

Contact Information: For more information, please send a message via our contact form.

 

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