Appalachian Kentucky newspapers emphasize political voices on Obamacare
By Justin
Richter and Al Cross
University of Kentucky College of Communication and Information
University of Kentucky College of Communication and Information
Appalachian Kentucky
newspapers gave their readers limited information about the Patient Protection
and Affordable Care Act in the two months before the Oct. 1 rollout of the law,
and their coverage of it was dominated by opinions of public officials, largely
those opposed to the law. Coverage improved in October, but still left much to
be desired.
The research on
coverage of what is widely called Obamacare was conducted by the Institute for RuralJournalism and Community Issues, part of the School of Journalism and
Telecommunications at the University of Kentucky.
An estimated 640,000 Kentuckians have no health insurance, so “Any news
about obtaining it seems like a worthy topic for publication,” said Al Cross,
director of the Institute, who supervised the research as part of work funded
by the Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky.
The research examined most of the newspapers in one of the unhealthiest
and poorest regions of the country to see how well they were helping their
communities deal with huge changes in the health-insurance system. Despite the law’s importance and effect on
individuals, six of the 39 newspapers published nothing about Obamacare, and
nine of them published just one article about the law.
Appalachian Kentucky
has 54 counties with 61 newspapers; many are small weeklies, and only six are
dailies. Weekly newspapers generally limit their coverage to local news and are
not members of The Associated Press, which provides state and national news.
However, about half the weeklies in Kentucky participate in a story-sharing
service operated by the Kentucky Press Association, and all of them receive
weekly updates from Kentucky Health News, a publication of the Institute for
Rural Journalism and Community Issues.
While only about half
of Kentucky weeklies have regular editorial pages, and only a third have regular
editorials (even when broadly defined as a column from the editor or
publisher), about 40 percent of the Obamacare coverage in Kentucky Appalachian
newspapers consisted of opinion columns, usually from politicians or
commentators opposed to the law.
From Aug. 1 to Oct. 31,
the law was the topic of 40 opinion articles, 49 news stories and 12 press
releases. Many of the news stories reported mainly on opinions delivered by
politicians opposed to the law, such as Republican U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell.
McConnell figured large in coverage throughout the three-month
period. About one-fourth of all
Obamacare coverage in Appalachian Kentucky newspapers was about McConnell’s
opinions, either by publication of a column from him or coverage of his
expression of opinion.
During the period, McConnell continued a tour that he said had taken him
to more than 50 Kentucky hospitals in the last three years. At each stop,
he attacked Obamacare, and that was the subject of six news stories in the
papers examined. He made the same attack and mentioned the tour in opinion
pieces headlined “Kentuckians still don’t like Obamacare,” which appeared in
five of the 38 papers examined. A later column, “Kentuckians Still Not Buying
Obamacare,” appeared twice in the papers surveyed. Overall, the senator was either a dominant
voice in, or the writer of, 24.5 percent of all stories.
Five other public
officials gave their opinions on the law through opinion articles, including
Democratic Gov. Steve Beshear, who has embraced the law by expanding Medicaid and creating the state's own health-insurance exchange. Commentators
included political analysts and two anonymous writers, generally opposed to the
law.
Before the Oct. 1
rollout, 69 percent of news stories were dominated by public officials’
opinions of Obamacare. In October, that
declined to about 40 percent. Sources like the Associated
Press, Kentucky Health News, and other sources were used in more than half the
articles published in October.
The research period included the August congressional recess, which
included two major political events: the speaking at the Fancy Farm Picnic in
far Western Kentucky and the Kentucky Farm Bureau’s Country Ham Breakfast at
the state fair, at which Beshear and Republicans traded jabs about Obamacare.
Nine stories on those events appeared in the newspapers surveyed.
Overall, a lack of journalistic enterprise was seen in the newspapers. Four papers showed enterprise by doing their
own stories in advance of the exchange and noting the number or percentage of
people in their counties that were estimated to have no health coverage.
The uninsured angle was emphasized by Tom Mills of the Greensburg
Record-Herald and Janie Slavin of the McCreary County Record, both in Southern
Kentucky, an area where the percentage of uninsured is greatest. These stories
gave information on the opportunity to become insured, and gave others in the
county an opportunity to realize the significant number of their neighbors who
lack health insurance.
Such statistics were also mentioned by Tony Fyffe of the Louisa-based Big Sandy News
and Amelia Holliday of the Hazard Herald in front-page stories the week before
the exchange opened.
The Greensburg story was based partly on, and gave credit to, Kentucky
Health News. Two other papers ran a KHN story about the fact that smokers would
pay as much as a 40 percent surcharge for premiums on the exchange.
The Mountain Eagle in Letcher County published “New Health Care Law
Appears Popular Here,” a story that related the positive experiences of
staffers at a Whitesburg medical clinic since the rollout. The story quoted Teresa Fleming after helping
individuals receive coverage: “I keep saying hope. That’s what this is.”
During the research period, the Appalachian Kentucky newspapers in the
survey published 12 press releases that gave readers factual information that could
be helpful. “The Affordable Care Act is Upon Us - What We Need to Know”
appeared in the Licking Valley Courier of West Liberty. This release from
Kentucky Voices for Health was free of political representations, gave
statistics and conclusions from Kaiser Family Foundation studies, and informed
Morgan County readers of the law’s individual mandate and options for obtaining
health insurance.
Kentucky Voices for Health does not lobby, but is an umbrella
organization for lobbies that say everyone should have affordable, high-quality
health insurance. Its executive director, Regan Hunt, said perhaps one in 20
newspapers of in the state publish her releases, even less so in Appalachian
Kentucky. She said she has provided information to advocates in Appalachia so they
could write their own articles for local newspapers, but they were published
“very rarely.”
Justin Richter is a student in the College of
Communication and Information at the University of Kentucky. Al Cross is an
associate extension professor in the college’s School of Journalism and
Telecommunications and director of the school’s Institute for Rural Journalism
and Community Issues. This article was researched and written as part of an
independent-study course.
PRELIMINARY STORY ON FIRST TWO MONTHS OF RESEARCH:
By Justin Richter
University of Kentucky College of Communication and Information
By Justin Richter
University of Kentucky College of Communication and Information
Newspaper readers in Appalachian Kentucky rarely had the opportunity to
read factual, impartial information about health-care reform in the two months
before the new health-insurance system opened for enrollment.
That is among the preliminary findings of an ongoing study by the
Institute for Rural Journalism and Community Issues, part of the School of
Journalism and Telecommunications at the University of Kentucky. The research found that coverage was
dominated by opinions of public officials, largely those opposed to the law.
The research examined most newspapers in one of the unhealthiest and
poorest regions of the country to see how well they were preparing their
communities for a huge change in the health-insurance system. An estimated 640,000 Kentuckians have no
health insurance, so “Any news about obtaining it seems like a worthy topic for
publication,” said Al Cross, director of the Institute.
Appalachian Kentucky has 54 counties with 61 newspapers. The study
examined the 39 available at the University of Kentucky, or 64 percent of the
total. Many of the papers are small weeklies; only six are dailies.
Eight of the 39 papers published nothing in August and September about the
Kentucky Health Benefits Exchange, an insurance marketplace created under the
reform law – the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, widely known as
Obamacare.
Of the 61 articles the other newspapers published on Obamacare in the
two-month period, 21 were opinion articles, mainly from public officials; six
were press releases from organizations supporting the law, all of them factual;
two were fact-based columns; and 32 were news stories.
While most of the articles were news stories, 22 of the 32 stories were
dominated by the opinions of public officials, largely those opposing the law.
Only 10 of the news stories were based largely on fact rather than opinion. In
addition to the six fact-based press releases, other fact-based articles were a
short item about a community forum in an extension agent’s column, and a column
by a journalist criticizing politicians for misinforming the public about
issues, including Obamacare.
The research period included the
August congressional recess, which included two major political events: the
speaking at the Fancy Farm Picnic in far Western Kentucky and the Kentucky Farm
Bureau’s Country Ham Breakfast at the state fair, at which Democratic Gov.
Steve Beshear and Republicans traded jabs about Obamacare. Nine stories on
those events appeared in the Appalachian newspapers surveyed.
During August, Republican U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell continued a tour that
he said had taken him to 51 hospitals in the last three years. At each stop, he attacked Obamacare, and that
was the subject of six news stories in the papers examined. He made the same
attack and mentioned the tour in opinion pieces headlined “Kentuckians still
don’t like Obamacare,” which appeared in five of the 39 papers examined.
All told, McConnell’s opinion was reflected in more than a quarter of all
articles found about Obamacare, and some newspapers gave the senator two bites
of the apple. For example, his hospital
tour was covered in the Appalachian News-Express of Pikeville as a news story
on Aug. 17; on Sept. 18, his opinion article appeared in the thrice-weekly
paper.
Thus, political voices overwhelmed those of independent, authoritative
sources and journalists. Public
officials were able to use their positions and influence to dominate the
conversation on Obamacare.
There were exceptions. The
News-Express ran a comprehensive story about Obamacare and the opening of the
insurance exchange on Sept. 25. The story was written by Robyn L. Minor of the
Daily News in Bowling Green, which circulates in the western Appalachian
counties of Edmonson and Hart; it was distributed statewide by the Kentucky
Press News Service, a story-sharing service of the Kentucky Press Association.
A similar story in the Lexington Herald-Leader, which circulates in Appalachian
Kentucky, was distributed by the service, but the study did not examine the
Herald-Leader’s coverage.
Four Appalachian newspapers showed enterprise in doing their own stories
in advance of the exchange and noted the number or percentage of people in
their counties that were estimated to have no health coverage.
The uninsured angle was emphasized by Tom Mills of the Greensburg
Record-Herald and Janie Slavin of the McCreary County Record. These stories
gave information on the opportunity to become insured, and gave others in the
county an opportunity to realize the significant number of their neighbors who
lack health insurance.
The statistics were also mentioned by Tony Fyffe of the Big Sandy News
and Amelia Holliday of the Hazard Herald in front-page stories the week before
the exchange opened.
The Greensburg story was based partly on, and gave credit to, Kentucky
Health News – the service of the Institute for Rural Journalism and Community
Issues that provides health coverage to Kentucky newspapers. Two other papers
ran a KHN story about the fact that smokers would pay as much as a 40 percent
surcharge for premiums on the exchange.
Among the press releases, the
most comprehensive was from Kentucky Voices for Health. “The Affordable Care
Act is Upon Us - What We Need to Know” appeared in only one of the 39 papers
examined, the Licking Valley Courier of West Liberty. This release was free of political
representations, gave statistics and conclusions from Kaiser Family Foundation
studies, and informed Morgan County readers of the law’s individual mandate and
options for obtaining health insurance.
Kentucky Voices for Health does not lobby, but is an umbrella organization
for lobbies that say everyone should have affordable, high-quality health
insurance. Its executive director, Regan Hunt, said perhaps one in 20
newspapers publish her releases, even less so in Appalachian Kentucky. She said
she has provided information to advocates in Appalachia so they could write
their own articles for local newspapers, but they are published “very rarely.”
So, as the opening of the exchange approached, there was a general lack
of journalism about Obamacare in Appalachian Kentucky, as politicians’
appearances and opinions were the main source of information. The study is
continuing, and the Institute will report on October coverage sometime in November.
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