Writing and Publications

Many of our exceptional writers were reporters or seasoned freelance writers before joining our staff. They are adept at translating complicated health and science topics into compelling documents that move people and inspire action. Our writers put a human face on complicated policy issues, draft compelling op-eds, and draft news releases, newsletter articles and blog posts that get noticed. We are skilled at developing web site copy and tailoring its tone, content and layout for online readers. We also work with superb graphic designers and photographers to create vibrant materials that attract and engage readers.

Examples of our written products include:

  • Content pieces, such as feature stories, in-depth profiles, case studies, and issue briefs
  • Marketing materials, including brochures, annual reports, and newsletter articles
  • Media kit materials, such as news releases, fact sheets and talking points
  • Online content, including web site copy and blog posts
  • Articles for submission, such as op-eds and letters-to-the-editor
  • Conference proceedings, including monographs, background papers, and executive summaries

Preserving the Diversity of the World’s Food

Preserving the Diversity of the World’s Food

Seven years ago, a new organization was formed, driven by the conviction that a series of seemingly unrelated events—like the re-emergence of a crippling wheat fungus in Uganda; the loss of Afghanistan’s valuable seed collection during the country’s civil war; and the steady, silent, and permanent loss of crop diversity due to poor funding and equipment failures—could one day imperil the survival of the human race.

Improving Health Care Quality

Improving Health Care Quality

In a country known for training the best doctors in the world, it is disquieting that patients still need to worry about falling victim to medical mistakes and poor care. But the fact is that people in the United States -- no matter where they live -- receive the appropriate, recommended care only half the time.

This was the major finding of a landmark study released by the RAND Corporation's Elizabeth McGlynn, Ph.D., in the New England Journal of Medicine and, in McGlynn's words, it fundamentally shattered the belief that the U.S. health care system is the best in the world.

Campaigning Against Infectious Disease

Campaigning Against Infectious Disease

Vaccination ranks as the single most important public health achievement of the 20th century.  In the industrialized world, diphtheria, measles, and whooping cough – once causes of great fear, suffering, and death – are, for the most part, rare occurrences that minimally impact families and communities. Other scourges of the past, killers of millions, have largely been eliminated through polio and smallpox vaccines.

Defeating One of Humanity's Oldest Killers

Defeating One of Humanity's Oldest Killers

Doctors often refer to people who have never been infected with a malaria parasite as “malaria naïve.” That also would be an apt term for the world in general in 2001 when Burness Communications began our partnership with the PATH Malaria Vaccine Initiative (MVI).

Halting Childhood Obesity in Arkansas

Halting Childhood Obesity in Arkansas

If today's childhood obesity epidemic continues unabated, we will be faced with a daunting prospect: raising the first generation of American youth with a shorter life expectancy than their parents. Indeed, one-third of American children ages two to 19 are currently either obese or at risk of becoming obese. This marks a dramatic spike in the obesity rates among children of all ages nationwide since the 1960s. The related health risks are alarming. Obese children are increasingly being diagnosed with type 2 diabetes -- an affliction previously associated primarily with adults.

Improving Health Care in Metropolitan Washington, D.C.

Improving Health Care in Metropolitan Washington, D.C.

Washington, D.C. is not a healthy city. Compared to the rest of the U.S., the D.C. metropolitan area has higher than average rates of heart disease, diabetes, asthma, and infant mortality—as well as one of the highest rates of HIV/AIDS in the country. Not surprisingly, the most dire health statistics are found in the region’s low-income and minority neighborhoods.

Restoring Science to its Rightful Place

Restoring Science to its Rightful Place

In the late 1990s, the U.S. Congress helped launch, through funding for the National Institutes of Health (NIH), a renaissance in American medical discovery. During the renaissance, human genome sequencing was completed, powerful new research tools suddenly made the impossible seem possible, cancer and other disease rates began to decline as better diagnoses and treatment options were identified, and the potential to transform medicine seemed limitless.

Giving Choice Back to People with Disabilities

Giving Choice Back to People with Disabilities

Many of us take for granted the basic human right to direct our own daily lives: deciding for ourselves when to get up in the morning or go to bed at night, when to take a shower, and when and what to eat. But until recently, people with disabilities who receive Medicaid-funded personal assistance with these types of daily activities have not had much say in how or when those services are provided, or even who provides them.