Reporting on Addiction is a
collaborative movement staffed by media professionals working to decrease addiction stigmas by sharing leading practices for covering all types of addiction.
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Photos can help readers connect and remember. (ROA photo)
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One of the project's best offerings is its website's visual guide, which allows journalists to access photo portrayals that illustrate addiction experiences from multiple real-life angles. This addiction-sensitive photography helps journalists report on substance use while sticking to a principle of "do no harm."
The photos also help readers develop a more memorable and connected understanding of how illegal drugs harm individuals and communities. Access their one-page visual style guide
here.
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Applying for Reporting on Addiction's expert database takes less than five minutes. (ROA photo)
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The project also gives options for newsrooms of various sizes, including professional and student newsroom training, research-based reporting resources, and an active expert database for question-and-answer sessions.
For journalists covering the opioid settlement's terms, disbursements and news, the site has a series of recorded "Fireside Chats" and a Slack channel to help reporters inform readers about where, when and how opioid litigation money will be handled in their community.
As added support, Reporting on Addiction offers downloadable, free resources that include:
- Language style guide
- Digital Security Toolkit
- Trauma-Informed and Empathetic Reporting Toolkit
They also offer one-to-one and group training for individual journalists or their newsrooms.
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