Sharing and Global Health Blogging Google

How can we get more coverage of news when old media doesn’t seem to want to do it without outside support and new media (blogs, texting, sharedmedia) still seems a scattershot affair?

This is the fourth post in a series that began with “Rethinking Why I Blog.” The others are “What Plumpy’Nut Taught Me” and “Authentic Sharing vs. Selfish Sharing.”

One of my goals for my year was to develop a for a web-based . I know, I know, “” is such a quaint phrase, of , and . But it is descriptive. If it’s too old-fashioned for you, think “.”

The idea was to aggregate posts from around the globe as well as to provide funding for original reporting. I further focused the goal by targeting transparency issues in funding by eight major organizations. I developed the plan as part of a class on non-profits that I took at the and pitched it to the Open Society and folks. Both decided to pass.

Nowadays, though, I’m wondering if maybe I was just trying too hard or too soon? After all, I keep seeing efforts by individuals to write about what they find interesting or newsworthy in . The ones I find most interesting are not promotional or advocacy-oriented but rather add context and highlight overlooked news.

In addition to established blogs from in the field, e.g. Effect Measure, The Pump Handle, Aetiology, there are a few more student blogs, like these efforts from Karen Grepin at Harvard, GlobeMed at and Unacceptable from University. See others on my at right.

(Mostly US-generated, I know. Send me your recommendations for blogs from other countries using the comment section below!! I haven’t been bowled over by what I have read in the health section of Global Voices Online. )

The development community is farther along in self-publishing. See especially blogs from organizations like DFID and the Center for Global Development as well as DFID-funded Scidev.net. While trolling Twitter, I found “Blood and Milk,” a clear-eyed view by Alanna Shaikh of just how ethically challenged anti-poverty work can be despite good intentions.

Now that the Gates Foundation is investing in mainstream news organizations so they can cover news, you might say we don’t need individual efforts at reporting and commenting any more. Who needs amateurs, who post between bouts of norovirus or grant applications, when you can hire professionals [irony alert]?

And yet they write.

Update: PharmD+’s list of 100 global health blogs–three of mine are included, one of which is no longer active. But others on the list haven’t been updated for quite a while either, e.g. BrownforGlobalHealth (last post Sept. 2007) and Don Burke’s Global Health Blog (last post Jan. 2008).

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