Information Sick

JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY PRESSISBN: 9781421453125

How Journalism's Decline and Misinformation's Rise Are Harming Our Health-and What We Can Do About It

Price:
Sale price$75.99


By Joanne Kenen, Lymari Morales, Joshua M. Sharfstein
Imprint: JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 152 mm
Weight:

Pages:
216

Description

Joanne Kenen is a nationally known health journalist, writer, and public speaker focused on health policy and public health.



Lymari Morales is a communications executive whose work blends timeless journalism tactics with modern digital strategies.



Joshua M. Sharfstein, MD, is a pediatrician by training, a former health commissioner, and a professor of the practice in health policy and management.


Table of Contents Preface Introduction: Information Sick 1. The Collapse of Local News 2. The Fracturing of National News 3. The Flood of Misinformation 4. The Innovators 5. By and For: The Rise in Community Journalism 6. The Playbook 7. Protecting Yourself-And Others


In an era of declining trust and zero-cost misinformation, Information Sick offers a bracing diagnosis of how Americas broken media ecosystem is making us sicker—literally. Joanne Kenen, Lymari Morales, and Joshua Sharfstein trace the collapse of local journalism and the rise of disinformation with urgency and clarity, showing how these forces endanger lives and undermine public health.

—Dave A. Chokshi, 43rd Health Commissioner of New York City



The nation will never again tune in as one to Walter Cronkite every night. But there are answers to misinformation and declining trust, and this book finds them, powerfully. Its the first to tell the story of a growing, unheralded field fighting back to try to reclaim facts and the truth.

—Drew Altman, President and CEO, KFF



Co-authored with a national public health leader and a leading health care journalist, Information Sick is an engaging, readable, and practical guide to the perplexing and contentious world of health information in the United States. It is a must-read for anyone who wants to make health better in the United States and for clinicians who must guide their patients through the raging debates about what works and doesnt in modern medicine and public health.

—David Blumenthal, Harvard University


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