Realizing the Value of Health IT: Jumpstarting Efforts to Reduce Health Disparities
by Debra L. Ness | Sep 16, 2013 | Digital Health
Health disparities and health information technology (IT). Those two issues aren’t linked very often, but they should be, and National Health IT Week presents a great opportunity to talk about why. Health information technology is a valuable tool we can use to reduce disparities for millions of Americans and improve the quality of health care.
Jersey City Takes a Great Step Toward a Sick Days Standard
by Debra L. Ness | Sep 11, 2013 | Paid Sick Days
Members of the City Council in Jersey City, New Jersey, have taken an exciting step toward guaranteeing all workers in the city have the right to earn sick days. This is great news for the city, the state and paid sick days efforts across the country.
Youth Activism for Sex Education
by Adrian Nava | Sep 10, 2013 | Reproductive Rights
As educators, advocates, and allies of sexual health, we often ask ourselves why we are still having conversations about the implementation and support of comprehensive sexuality education for young people across the nation.
Campaigns Heat Up, Progress Continues
by National Partnership Staff | Sep 9, 2013 | Paid Sick Days
Summer may be coming to an end, but some efforts to advance paid sick days standards across the country are just starting to heat up.
Good News from Businesses in Connecticut
by Vicki Shabo | Sep 9, 2013 | Paid Sick Days
Less than two weeks into this year, we have already celebrated a new paid sick days law in Portland, Ore., and a major victory in the effort to expand D.C.’s existing paid sick days law to cover tipped workers.
Honoring America’s Grandparents
by Debra L. Ness | Sep 8, 2013 | Paid Leave
Grandparents Day is a time to celebrate grandparents and the many ways they support and unite our families. It’s also a moment to consider whether we as a nation are doing all that we can to honor their contributions.
A Bittersweet Labor Day
by Debra L. Ness | Aug 30, 2013 | Paid Sick Days
Labor Day is a time to pay tribute to the enormous contributions of working people in this country. It is also a time for those of us who seek fairness and equality for all workers to consider how far we’ve come, and how far we have to go.
“Meaningful Use” of Health IT: What the FACA?!
by Erin Mackay | Aug 29, 2013 | Digital Health
What happens when you put a couple of dozen doctors, technology vendors, consumer advocates, researchers, public health officials, state legislators and others in a room and ask them to agree on exactly what it means to ‘meaningfully use’ electronic health records? Not as many fights as you’d think. And thanks to the Federal Advisory Committees Act [1] – which created the FACAs responsible for creating the first draft of Meaningful Use criteria – we know!
An Opportunity to Reduce Health Disparities that We Cannot Afford to Waste
by Erin Mackay | Aug 28, 2013 | Digital Health
One of America’s greatest assets is its incredible diversity. Today, one in five people in this country age five and older speak a language other than English at home. The U.S. Hispanic population has reached 50.5 million, accounting for more than half of the population increase since 2000.
An Unfinished Agenda
by Judith L. Lichtman | Aug 26, 2013 | Fair Pay
It has been 93 years since women gained the right to vote. A lot has changed in those years.
A Day to Remember, A March That Must Continue
by National Partnership Staff | Aug 22, 2013 | Reproductive Rights
On August 28, 1963, hundreds of thousands of men and women came together in Washington, D.C., for the historic March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. Fifty years later, the march continues.
When is a Supervisor Not a Supervisor?
by Sarah Crawford | Aug 8, 2013 | Supreme Court and Judicial Nominations
In June, the US Supreme Court dealt a stunning blow to workers’ rights in Vance v. Ball State University, a case that could have a chilling impact on victims of harassment and America’s civil rights laws.

