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Al Tompkins, Poynter faculty member


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A dozen sites
I'm diggin'


1. Who killed Chandra Levy? The Washington Post spent a year looking for new clues and insights and presents its findings in a 13-part series.

2. This cool interactive map shows the spread of obesity across the U.S.

3. Jessica's Trial: The Kansas City Star takes you inside a trial involving a sex-abuse victim, from the trauma caused by the trial to the problems selecting the jury. This is real insight.

4. Digsby.com is what you get when you combine social networks, instant messaging and e-mail into one application.

5. Fake Degrees: WTVF in Nashville finds a number of government employees using degrees from diploma mills.

6. This state-by-state interactive map shows you which airports have lost the most flights from their schedules.

7. The "Where the hell is Matt" dancing video has attracted more than 6.8 million views on YouTube. The 2005 version attracted 10 million views.

8. NASA is working on a new generation of rockets to take humans to the moon.

9. A flame retardant banned for use in children's pajamas because of cancer concerns is showing up in sofas and household products. Why weren't you told?

10. IRE has data to help journalists investigate highway and water accidents and deaths.

11. Blogger.com is better than ever now that you can post vertical photos. And Google Docs has upgraded its feature that enables you to embed a presentation in your blog.

12. What are the laws about journalists attending juvenile court hearings or reading juvenile court records?



We are always looking for your great ideas. Send Al a few sentences and links.



Editor's Note: Al's Morning Meeting is a compendium of ideas, edited story excerpts and other materials from a variety of Web sites, as well as original concepts and analysis. When the information comes directly from another source, it will be attributed and a link will be provided whenever possible. The column is fact-checked, but depends on the accuracy and integrity of the original sources cited. Errors and inaccuracies found will be corrected.





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There is a great lesson for journalists in the Florida "nanny cam" case that prosecutors recently dropped. The entire case was built around a secret video that seemed to show a nanny abusing a baby. The nanny was vilified; the tape aired over and over.

But two and a half years after the nanny was sent to jail, she is free because an expert finally explained to the court that the camera only snapped still frames -- not actual, real-time video. The still frames run as a movie can make even a gentle motion appear to be violent. See the video in coverage from Miami-Fort Lauderdale's CBS-4 in.

 

About.com offers some resources on the "nanny cam" phenomenon.



Do Hand Sanitizers Work?


A new study says it all depends on how much alcohol is in the sanitizer. Less than 60 percent alcohol apparently won't kill harmful bacteria and viruses.



Women Packing Heat


ABC News says women are showing up in increasingly large numbers at gun ranges and gun-sales counters. In fact, the president of the NRA is a woman, only the second woman to head the organization in the roughly 130 years of its existence. The gun-toting gals even have their own magazine and the NRA is dedicating an entire section of its Web site to women.
 


 

Bird Flu's Cost


If the bird flu ever reached pandemic levels, how could businesses respond?

 

The Age (Australia) included this sobering assessment and advice:

Travel, tourism, hospitality and retail have been singled out among industries a pandemic is most likely to affect.

Mercer Human Resource Consulting has warned that companies need to start looking at such areas as caregivers' leave, sick leave and bereavement leave in the event of a pandemic.

Company health, disability, salary continuance and business travel insurance policies would also need to be reviewed, as would life insurance.

Crisis support, well beyond the support that standard employee-assistance programs provide, would need to be addressed.

Mercer warned that companies needed to look closely at setting up operations in ways designed to limit the spread of the disease.

This would include greater use of telephony and video conferencing, avoiding unnecessary travel, which could include meetings, workshops and training sessions, encouraging employees to work from home and developing more flexible work arrangements to avoid workplace crowding, and setting up work arrangements to avoid public transport in peak hours. [...]

Some authorities have predicted a death toll of more than 100 million.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have some resources for businesses:

  • Business Pandemic Influenza Planning Checklist: In the event of a pandemic, businesses will play a key role in protecting employees' health and safety.
  • Pandemic Flu Business Letter and PDF: Secretaries Michael O. Leavitt (Secretary of Health and Human Services), Michael Chertoff (Secretary of Homeland Security), and Carlos M. Gutierrez (Secretary of Commerce) provide a letter to business leaders about the potential of pandemic influenza.
  • Pandemic Preparedness: People, Plans, Products and Practice: New, February 22 -- A presentation by Dr. Julie Gerberding, describing pandemic influenza basics, the CDC's plans for saving lives, counter-measures such as vaccines and antivirals and checklists to help businesses and other organizations prepare.
As early as last year, fast-food restaurant chains were on the offensive, trying to reassure customers. Forbes recently covered McDonald's approach.
 

 

Who Would Get Care?

 

There is a lot of conversation going on in medical circles about how the health-care community would parse out treatment. Just look at this story from ABC News' special bird flu coverage as an example:

A "medium-level" flu pandemic would likely cause between 89,000 to 207,000 deaths and about 314,000 to 734,000 people to be hospitalized in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. A large percentage of these hospitalized patients could be critically ill and require a ventilator.

 

With that in mind, doctors throughout the country are debating how to parse out a limited supply of ventilators in the event of an outbreak.

 

Dr. John Hick, an emergency physician at Hennepin County Medical Center in Minneapolis, has been working on a plan where the limited number of ventilators would be used for healthier patients, while the sickest patients would not receive them unless one became available.

 

His plan attempts to do the "greatest good for the greatest number" because the healthier patients would be more likely to benefit from ventilation and ultimately have a better outcome, he said. His proposal was published in the February issue of the journal Academic Emergency Medicine. 

The CDC offers these planning checklists:

  • School District (K-12) Pandemic Influenza Planning Checklist: (Does your school system take this seriously?) The CDC says, "Local educational agencies (LEAs) play an integral role in protecting the health and safety of their district's staff, students and their families." 

And some other, related resources:

  • The White House: U.S. National Strategy: The United States' approach to prepare, detect, and respond to a pandemic; roles of federal, state and local governments, private industry, international partners and individual citizens
  • WHO Current Situation Guidance: The World Health Oganization's current alert level, advice to the public, current avian influenza situation, basic facts, and more
  • PandemicFlu.gov: The official U.S. government Web site for pandemic and avian influenza information
  • Ready.gov: Practical planning steps, templates, and links to resources providing more detailed business continuity and disaster preparedness information

 



TV Station Spots Tornado Live


It's spring and Oklahoma City's KOCO-TV is twister-tracking.

 

Here are some tornado resources from CBS News' excellent Disaster Links page:

 

 



Trunk Monkey


Okay, I admit it; this has nothing to do with news. It is something to make you laugh. These Oregon auto dealership commercials are the funniest things I have seen in a long time.



We are always looking for your great ideas. Send Al a few sentences and hot links.



Editor's Note: Al's Morning Meeting is a compendium of ideas, edited story excerpts and other materials from a variety of Web sites, as well as original concepts and analysis. When the information comes directly from another source, it will be attributed and a link will be provided whenever possible. The column is fact-checked, but depends upon the accuracy and integrity of the original sources cited. Errors and inaccuracies found will be corrected.


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