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MHCA 6104 - Graduate Project in Healthcare Administration: News Resources

Introduction

In 2016, the Pew Research Center found that 62% of Americans get their news from social media.  Given the dramatic increase of fake news sites or news sites that promote a certain point of view at the expense of the facts and truth, it is important to know if the news you are reading is real, unbiased, factual, and truthful, or if it is fake.  

With the rise of clickbait and fake news stories on social media, it is important to know what news sources are trust-worthy and reliable with a minimum level of spin or bias.  A recent study by Stanford Economist, Matthew Gentzkow, found that 1 fake news story had the effect of 36 television campaign ads in 2016 Election.  

We encourage you to read widely from reputable news sources in order to avoid confirmation bias: the tendency to search for, interpret, favor, and recall information in a way that confirms one's preexisting beliefs or hypotheses, while giving disproportionately less consideration to alternative possibilities.

News Databases from UAFS

Reputable News Sources

Suggested Periodicals

**You must be a UAFS-affiliate to access these titles**  

The advantage of accessing these titles from our databases is that they are indexed and freely available to you in full-text.  

How to Spot Fake News

"How to Spot Fake News" from the International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions

Know Who is Reputable

The graphic below is an excellent representation of what you can expect from various popular news sources.  

"Fight Fake News.  Know Who is Reputable."

by , December 13, 2016.