Local Reporter Named Health Coverage Fellow

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Jennifer Huberdeau
BOSTON — A Berkshire County journalist is one of 11 from across the nation named to the first class of the Health Coverage Fellowship.

Jennifer Huberdeau of the North Adams Transcript will join Cathy Corman of WGBH Radio in Boston, Shawn Cunningham of WAGM TV in Maine, Tara Kaprowy of the Sentinel-Echo in Kentucky and Community Newspaper Holdings, Cynthia McCormick of the Cape Cod Times, Karen Nugent of the Worcester Telegram & Gazette, Denis Paiste of the New Hampshire Union Leader, Jason Roberson of the Dallas Morning News, Kathryn Tolbert of the Washington Post, Laura Unger of the Louisville Courier-Journal and Robert Weisman of the Boston Globe.

Huberdeau, of Adams, covers health, education and local government in the North Adams area. She earned her journalism degree from Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts.

The fellowship, the first of its kind in the country, is designed to help the media do a better job covering critical health-care issues. It does that by bringing in as speakers more than 50 top health officials, policy people and researchers. It also brings the fellows out to watch firsthand how the system works, from walking the streets at night with mental-health case workers to riding a Medflight helicopter.

The program, now entering its ninth year, is sponsored by the Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts Foundation, with help from the Maine Health Access Foundation, New Hampshire's Endowment for Health, Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky, and Texas-based Hogg Foundation for Mental Health.

The fellowship will run for nine days, beginning April 30. It is housed at Babson College's Center for Executive Education in Wellesley, and is operated in collaboration with leading journalism organizations. Larry Tye, who covered health and environmental issues at the Boston Globe for 15 years, directs the program. A former Nieman Fellow and the author of five books, Tye has taught journalism at Boston University, Northeastern, Tufts, and Harvard.

The fellowship will focus on a series of pressing health issues, from insuring the uninsured to mental illness, ethnic and economic disparities in the delivery of care, and the latest innovations in medical treatment. Attention also will be given to public health scares, from understanding the deadly powers of illnesses like swine and avian flu to knowing the capabilities — and limits — of public health authorities who respond to terrorism and disease outbreaks.

Tye, the program director, will be on call to the journalists for the full year following their nine days in Wellesley. He will help when they are stuck for ideas, or for whom to call on a story. He will assist in thinking out projects and carving out clearer definitions of beats. He also maintains a Web site where fellows post their stories.
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Companion Corner Grey Boy at No Paws Left Behind

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — There's a cat No Paws Left Behind still waiting for his forever home.

iBerkshire's Companion Corner is a weekly series spotlighting an animal in our local shelters that is ready to find a home. He was previously highlighted but he now has new information.

Grey Boy is 10 years old and is a gray and white domestic shorthair and was previously highlighted on Companion Corner.

The shelter's Executive Director Noelle Howland introduced us to him and his long journey to be ready for adoption.

"He's been here a couple months. He was a transfer from a rescue in Bennington. They were out of space, so we had taken him in with a few other cats. So he's been here a couple months. He came in with what we believed was a respiratory infection," she said. "So it took us a little bit to get him ready, and then he also needed a dental. So he has nice, clean teeth. He had some teeth removed, and then he has to go back in and have one more dental. So he'll be all ready to go."

It was previously thought that he has feline herpes but he was recently diagnosed with a palette fracture because of how bad his dental disease was, which is what is causing his sneezing. He can now go home with cats, a cat-savvy dog and children.

"He has had two dentals since being with us. Due to the palate fracture he will be sneezy for the rest of his life, not contagious sneezing, but that doesn’t stop him from living a perfectly happy life. He should be on wet food with chunks due to this and since he has had many teeth removed," Howland said.

Grey Boy loves to play with toys and enjoy treats. He would also love to have a window to lounge or bird-watch in.

"He is not afraid of anything. He's very curious, so I'm sure he'd love if you have windows for him to look out of. He still plays, even though he's 10 it does not stop him. So any home would be a good fit for him."

Now that he is ready to be adopted, he is excited. When you walk into the room with him he will rub up against your leg introducing himself and asking to be pet.

"Usually, I would say, when you're walking, he'll bonk into you so he might catch you off guard a little bit. He constantly is rubbing against you," Howland said. "He really, I would say he's lazy when you want him to be, and he's active when you want him to be. He'll play with toys. He's usually lounging away. And then when he comes out he'll play. He loves it. So, very friendly, easy going cat."

He is now perfectly healthy with his dentals all done and veterinary care up to date and is ready to find his forever family.

"I would say the friendliest, easiest cat you could have. He's just, he's just gonna be a little sneezy sometimes, but that doesn't stop him from doing anything," she said.

Grey Boy's adoption fee is sponsored by Rooted in Balance Counseling LLC.

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