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Control F

Control F

De: KUOW News and Information
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Control F is a podcast about data — hard, fuzzy, surprising, and sometimes unreliable data — and all the ways it influences our daily lives. In each episode, we dig deep on a topic and search through research, algorithms, and assumptions to bring you insights on how stuff works. In a world ruled by numbers, Control F reads between the (spreadsheet) lines to find the bigger story.

Ciencias Sociales Política y Gobierno
Episodios
  • Can we get better at measuring homelessness?
    Mar 11 2026

    Someone who has to survive without a regular place to sleep at night is vulnerable to danger, illness, and the more insidious harm of being shunned. One way to quantify the harm caused by homelessness is to understand how many people are experiencing it. How do we do that? We try to count them, and one city is leading the charge on a new approach. Teo tells Clare how it could change our view of our unhoused neighbors.

    We want to answer your questions about how our world works! Click here to submit a question using our online form, or email the team at ControlF@kuow.org

    Support the show by supporting our home, KUOW Public Radio in Seattle.

    Sources in this episode:

    • Annual Homelessness Assessment Report, Department of Housing and Urban Development, 2024
    • Full Point-in-Time Counts, Housing, Infrastructure, and Communities Canada
    • Point-in-Time Count Underway, King County Regional Homelessness Authority
    • Point-in-Time Count presentation, King County Regional Homelessness Authority
    • Evaluation of Respondent-Driven Sampling prevalence estimators using real-world reported network degree, Lisa Avery and Michael Rotondi, Sage Journal
    • Point-in-Time Count: Volunteer training, Texas Homeless Network, 2020
    • Point-in-Time Count standards and methodologies training, Department of Housing and Urban Development, 2018
    • Interview with Maria Arnes, PIT volunteer, 2026
    • Interview with Jack Almquist, University of Washington, 2026
    • Interview with William Towey, King County Regional Homelessness Authority, 2026
    • Interview with Ann Oliva, National Alliance to End Homelessness, 2025

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Más Menos
    32 m
  • What is the poverty line? And why does it matter?
    Feb 25 2026

    In 1964, then-President Lyndon B. Johnson declared war on poverty. Johnson wanted to lift the nation’s poor into a better life, via programs like food stamps, Medicare and Medicaid. But more than 60 years later, our country is still grappling with how to alleviate the challenges of poverty – including how we measure it.

    In this episode, Teo explains how the Federal Poverty Line is calculated and what it has to do with Jello.

    We want to answer your questions about how our world works! Click here to submit a question using our online form, or email the team at ControlF@kuow.org

    Support the show by supporting our home, KUOW Public Radio in Seattle.

    Sources in this episode:

    • U.S. Census Bureau Timeline of Poverty Measure, 2014
    • How the U.S. Census Bureau Measures Poverty, 2022
    • What does living at the poverty line look like?, USA Facts, 2023
    • Poverty Guidelines vs Poverty Thresholds, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
    • Poverty Line Matrix, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 2026
    • Remembering Mollie Orshansky — The Developer of the Poverty Thresholds, Society Security Administration, 2008
    • Relatively Deprived, New Yorker, 2006
    • Mollie Orshansky, Statistician, Dies at 91, The New York Times, 2007
    • Mollie Orshansky: Inventor of the Poverty Line, NPR, 2007
    • Thrifty Food Plan, U.S. Department of Agriculture, 2021
    • Thrifty Food Plan: Better planning and accountability could help ensure quality of future reevaluations, U.S. Government Accountability Office Report to Congressional Requesters, 2022
    • Family Food Plans and Food Costs, U.S. Department of Agriculture, 1962
    • The Indians in the Lobby, Season 3, Episode 8, The West Wing, 2001
    • NPR audience call out on SNAP benefits, 2025
    • Legacies of the War on Poverty, The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political & Social Science, 2024

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Más Menos
    28 m
  • Why does health care cost so much in the United States?
    Feb 11 2026

    The United States spends more on health care than any other country on earth. Most health care products in the U.S. cost at least twice what other countries pay, sometimes up to ten times as much. And everyday Americans are often left footing the bill, grappling with sky-high premiums and medical debt. Clare tells Teo how the forces in our health care system keep costs high, and what you can do about the (possibly giant) number at the bottom of your next medical bill.

    We want to answer your questions about how our world works! Click here to submit a question using our online form, or email the team at ControlF@kuow.org

    Support the show by supporting our home, KUOW Public Radio in Seattle.

    Sources in this episode:

    • The Insane Things Hospitals Can Charge You for When you Give Birth, Vice, 2018
    • Health Care Costs and Affordability, Kaiser Family Foundation, 2025
    • Health costs associated with pregnancy, childbirth, and infant care, Peterson-KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation) Health System Tracker, 2025
    • Utah Dad Posts Hospital Bill With Nearly $40 Fee for Skin-to-Skin Contact After Son's Birth, ABC News, 2016
    • As Americans Struggled, Health Insurers Made a Record-Breaking $71.3 Billion in Profits, Wendell Potter on Substack, 2025
    • Health Care Debt In The U.S.: The Broad Consequences Of Medical And Dental Bills, Kaiser Family Foundation, 2022
    • The Marshall Allen Project
    • Cost Data from the British Columbia Ministry of Health
    • Interview with Gerard Anderson, Johns Hopkins Professor of Health Policy and Management
    • Trump struck deals with 16 drug companies. But they're still raising prices this year, NPR, 2026

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Más Menos
    30 m
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