And the page doesn't even work today - i'm assuming its been overwhelmed with 
users, but everytime i get on it, and try the interactive tools, it times out. 
siobhan
 
Siobhan Champ-Blackwell
Community Outreach Liaison
NN/LM-MCR
Creighton University Health Sciences Library
2500 California Plaza
Omaha, NE 68178
402.280.4156/800.338.7657 option#1,#2, then #1
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://nnlm.gov/mcr
http://medstat.med.utah.edu/blogs/BHIC/ 
<http://medstat.med.utah.edu/blogs/BHIC/> 
http://www.digitaldivide.net/profile/siobhanchamp-blackwell 
<http://www.digitaldivide.net/profile/siobhanchamp-blackwell>  
 

________________________________

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Andy Carvin
Sent: Wed 4/20/2005 1:46 PM
To: The Digital Divide Network discussion group
Subject: [DDN] blog: The Mystery of the Food Pyramid



Hi everyone,

I've written a blog entry today that might be of interest. It's called
"The Mystery of the Food Pyramid: An E-Government Fiasco?", and it
discusses the new USDA Food Pyramid released this week. The pyramid is
actually one of a dozen pyramids now available, based on a person's age,
gender and level of physical activity. Unfortunately you need to go
online to find out which diet you should follow, and this raises some
serious questions regarding the digital divide, e-government for all,
and Web accessibility for the disabled. Here are some quotes from my blog:

... I truly, truly hope the USDA does more than just this website to
educate the public, though. As I've written before in my work on
e-government for all, it's poor policymaking to assume that all
constituents will have equal access to the Internet or the skills to use
it. Therefore, you need to make sure you use alternative offline
channels -- TV, radio, print, in-person meetings, etc -- to make
government services and information available to the people who need it.

Unfortunately, when you look at various demographic groups, there's a
higher likelihood of lower-income, less-educated people to eat a poor
diet. Just the audience you'd want to reach in a public health campaign,
right? Paradoxically, they're also the ones least likely to have
Internet access or Internet skills. This makes it even more important to
invest in large-scale offline campaigns to get health-related
information directly into their hands.

Meanwhile, don't get me started on Web accessibilty for the disabled. I
ran an accessibility test on the homepage and the "Inside the Pyramid"
page, which describes the pyramid in greater detail. Both failed even
the most basic accessibility standards; in the case of the homepage, it
was because it didn't have alternative text descriptions for all the
images on the homepage....

To read more, please visit here:

http://www.andycarvin.com

A permanent link for the article is here:
http://www.andycarvin.com/archives/2005/04/the_mystery_of.html

thanks,
ac

--
-----------------------------------
Andy Carvin
Program Director
EDC Center for Media & Community
acarvin @ edc . org
http://www.digitaldivide.net
http://www.tsunami-info.org
Blog: http://www.andycarvin.com
-----------------------------------
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