Thank you and I will keep this short, I promise. As you heard already today, in Austria there are 14 community radios and 3 community television stations. All are non-commercial, there is funding for non-commercial broadcasting and it is officially like a private non-commercial third sector of media and there are over 40 languages you hear in this 17 media operations and commit is the organization for training and research and there's also the Association of Austrian community media for punt fire on funk the lobbying organization representing community media in Austria skip the history part you can read it in the report or talk to Helmut later, he's been there from the beginning. Just some findings from my report, from my research I did for this project. I won't go through it in detail, but some aspects you can see on the slide we found when we conducted the report one and a half years ago, we did the research, I guess, and some topics popped up when I also did interviews with experts on the topic who were also present as active community media broadcasters. And this is something I want to focus most, maybe the, you can see here the International Health Literacy Survey about, yeah, we heard already today, people use Dr. Google and search online also, not only via via Google maybe also on social media for health topics and health issues and this is really important and this is the link between health literacy and media literacy and why this is so important that also the people I interviewed spotted on this importance of the topic and there's of course a connection between health literacy and the healthy lifestyle. When you are more health literate, you tend to live a healthier life. And some best practice projects I discovered in my desktop research and in the interviews with the experts. So you really can say it's maybe like everywhere else in community media, there's a strong involvement of experts present in community broadcasting and also experts on consequences of health issues, people who live with the challenges of diseases or of health issues in general. And from my research point of view, the projects I found, they tend to through the lens on a different side or see it through a different lens as you wish and more solution orientated give of course you have to focus on problems but also this more an aspect of dealing with solutions or maybe people who deal with consequences of health who are just a lift of the challenges they are experts in their topic and there are many examples you can find in the report I found I want to focus on one from our colleagues from grads from radio Helsinki this the precast its punk this will be in translation like a care had care meeting point for the topic of care and there is a nursing care emergency in Austria and we need a lot of care workers because the Austrian population is getting older so this is really a topic and Karin Schuster, a community radio broadcaster from Helsinki. She's doing an excellent project here and she shows that she's broadcasting radio programs about care work but this shows that community media is not only broadcasting it's also a living room where people come together meet and discuss different topics and share experiences and also like doing other activities like a care dance flash mob. Karin told me in the interview she organized once and this is really like an example I want to present you and you can read it in the report where you find another ones and just some last words to our workshop we have with the groups from St. Burton and Innsbruck and with Yvonne our expert and I was very happy to be part of this it was really great and I think it was in a in a small example really showing the goals we had for this project in the beginning so it was really people coming together from different stations experts coming with their experiences and their knowledge and we were related, linked to the topics we had in the report of course of the two projects you hear later on, they had in mind for developing the new broadcasting topic and this really came together and I'm happy that we do a follow-up because the groups connected very well and I was very happy to yeah this was really a success and I thank you all being part and still part in this and I give the stage to Freirath stage to Freirat. Hi, everyone. My name is Juliana. I work for Freirat. I do community building there. And I'm going to tell you something about our project, which was called, I'm going to name the English name. It was actually a German title, but it also works in English english which is great it's antibodies women in the healthcare system first i want to tell you something about freirad real quick freirad frey's radio innsbruck is one of 14 community radio stations which we saw earlier on the slide in Austria and it's the only one in Tyrol. We started on July 6 2002 so then we started airing 24 7. We have more than 100 shows and about approximately 400 broadcasters actively involved in those shows. It's really hard to say because they change like from now and then it's more and less you know. Like I said we broadcast 24 7 and we have about more than 15 languages which is great. I also want to tell you something about our past or current public health programs. One of them actually the broadcaster is sitting in the audience Alexandra and she's the broadcaster from Phlega discursive it's a show about care work and actually it's airing today at 5 p.m. so if you all want to listen to it you can go to the private website we have two shows about mental health which is Psychiatrie in Bewegung and Psycho-Kompakt and we have one show where the broadcaster is talking to different guests from the public health sector and we also have many many more which are not like regular shows but air now and then those are several special broadcasts and recordings from conferences and lectures and stuff like that but like I said I don't want to focus on fire I don't want to focus on the project today because we already heard a lot about how free radios work and free free media institutions work so okay like I said our project was called Antibodies, Women in the Healthcare System. So what is it about? A woman has to look healthy. Whether she really is, is of secondary importance in our society. Society pretends that the well-being of us women is only linked to external attractiveness and beauty, to fitness, nutrition, healthy skin, and of course beauty products. But women's health involves much more than just external or physical attractiveness. Women face serious health problems every day around the world. And these, like I'm not only talking about period pain here, these range from diseases such as endometriosis or breast cancer to cardiovascular diseases and many, many more. These diseases are often overlooked, tabooed in society, and women are often left alone to deal with their medical problems, which is a big issue. Findings and knowledge of medical studies, for example, are still mainly based on the male body as a starting point and female bodies have to adapt to those practices very often without receiving the right treatment or even drug dosages. Women are obviously disadvantaged and discriminated against in the discourse surrounding the health sector. As part of our project, Freirat was working with mostly female experts to investigate questions about physical, mental and medical well-being of women. By addressing these topics, our goal was to raise mainly awareness for the defects of the current public health system and show what still has to be done to have a just public health system that is not discriminating and doesn't create or reproduce inequalities. The female editorial team, we were like a mainly female editorial team, talked about issues that affect themselves in order to counter a predominantly male debate and discussion about the female body. Some facts about the show. We had six shows, like a total of six shows of approximately 55 minutes, because that's like the usual duration of our shows at Freirath. There were eight people actively involved in creating those shows, seven were from or from around Innsbruck, and one joined us from St. Pölten, Cosima. She's not here today, but we thank her very much because her show was great. And the editorial board was Serena Obkircher. She left Freirath to continue her studies end of October. That's why I took over then. So I was her assistant and now I'm editorial board. I don't know. I don't feel comfortable with that. So the production process, we began in May. We had our first editorial meeting. So we had three editorial meetings in total. One was in May, one was in June, and one in September. And those were really nice to just getting to know each other. We had the possibility to brainstorm on first ideas, discuss our needs and plans, present ideas to participants and all of them had the possibility to exchange their experiences with their work on the series. In July we had the workshop in St. Pölten, so the Freirat team traveled to St. Pölten and we visited Campus and City Radio which was really nice and on one of those days Yvonne prepared an extremely well-researched presentation on women's health, gender medicine, physical and psychological health, public health communication and sexualized violence against women for our production team. And the discussions about the topics were very fruitful and inspiring and led to Cosima joining our team. After the Comet workshop in St. Pölten, all of us were like really hyped and we went back to Innsbruck and started to record our first shows. We worked on the graphic for the series, the one who did it is also in the audience today, it's Catherine, and we also created a jingle, which I want to show you as well, and I'm going to try if that works now. Was haben wir hier? Frau Doktor, uns bleibt nicht mehr viel Zeit. Diese Frau leidet an akuter genderbasierter Vernachlässigung im Gesundheitssystem. Schnell, geben Sie ihr 500 Milligramm Gleichberechtigung. anti-körper frauen im gesundheitssystem für risiken und nebenwirkungen lesen sie die sende beschreibung oder fragen sie die zuständige Yeah, so it was in German, I'm sorry for that, but I think that you maybe realized what it was about. I can translate it. It actually was like a talk between two doctors, like a simulated talk between two doctors. And the first one said, what do we have here? And the second one says, we need to act quick. This woman is suffering from gender-based, oh God, yeah, gender-based disadvantages in our society. And she said, oh oh give her 500 milligrams of Equality. Yeah, so that was what was it about and actually the last section is because usually when you have like those drug ads on TV, they always say this sentence about if you if you want to know more about risks or something else you can ask your if you if you want to know more about risks or something else you can ask your pharmacy and stuff so there was like mimicking that yeah it's much funnier if you understand it than if you explain it okay so I'm going on in August like after after the workshop in St. Pölten also the newcomers of the Freirat editorial team participated in a basic seminar at Freirat to learn about the basics about community media how a radio show is prepared how advertising is defined they learned basics about media law and how to produce good interviews because I would say half of them were newcomers, and half of them were like oldies. And we created a buddy system so more experienced radio broadcasters teamed up with the newbies so that both could learn from each other. I want to tell you, I want to just give you a quick overview about the shows we did. Those are some pictures that we took when we were at Campus and City Radio. Like I said, we did six shows. The first one was about the Austrian Women's Health Report 2022. And it was done by Alexandra. And she had an interview with Yvonne. So that was the first show. The second show was done by Leonie Schießendoppler. It was about precaution and prevention in women's health. She also did an interview with an expert. The third one was about gender and language in the healthcare system. It was again done by Alexandra and together with Caroline, Caroline Elshara. The fourth show was about women and mental health and it was done by Cosima from Campus and City Radio and she did it like her regular show on Campus and City Radio which is called him ernst yet seriously now and it was also really great and it really it did fit in really good in our in our program series um the fifth one was about abortion and it was done by sophia and by um catherine they are both here today and the last one or for now last one was about menstruation between taboo and progress and it was done by Lily Vossack and Barbara Klübenschädel. The end of the series is yet to come like some people already mentioned we have a last meeting with Campus and City Radio they're coming to visit us in Innsbruck in February so we're really looking forward to seeing you again the production has stopped for now our last show was produced for December 14th and we'll see how or if it will continue I want to talk about just real quick about highlights, challenges and changes. For me personally every show was a highlight because they were all they had like really really exciting and interesting topics. We had great interview partners who were mostly female and every show was being drafted and produced in such a unique way, so every show was a highlight for me and it would be really hard to pick one or one moment. The difficulty, the main difficulty in the whole project has been concerning time reasons. For us the time between the call for proposals and the deadline for handing in the proposal has been quite short. And it was difficult, like, the main difficulty was to find radio broadcasters this quick that were able to start a new project this soon. But we did it. One objective of the E3J project at Freirad was to establish an editorial team that will continue to produce shows for this series, monthly or bimonthly or whatever. As of now it is yet unclear if the editorial team wants to continue to work on the series or is able to continue, because from now on it would all be voluntary work and hopes are high this will happen but we will see stay tuned but what personally really makes me like really happy is that three people of the editorial team started two new regular shows on Friday one is about women in a movie production which is done by Catherine and the other one is about menstruation so women related issues and topics are therefore being talked about even more on Friday in the future and that's great last but not least what did it mean for us to be part of this program? Like I said, we were able to form a new editorial team consisting of women only and make a whole new radio series about a really, really important topic. This was mainly possible because of the grant that we got. All of our broadcasters usually do their shows in their free time and voluntarily. So being part of the E3J meant that we were able to compensate the new editorial team for their time and effort and pay them for their work. We were able to do a basic workshop at Freirad, especially for the new editorial team or for the newbies in the team and show them all they have to know about free radios, doing radio and all they needed to produce those shows. We were able to win more radio broadcasters and develop a project that focuses on a topic that is really, really relevant in our society. And we had the opportunity to be part of this really inspiring workshop with Yvonne in St. Pölten. We were visiting campus in City Radio and we had an exchange of ideas and concepts with the public health editorial team there. You will hear more about their project afterwards. And we are also really looking forward to welcoming them in Innsbruck. And all of that would not or possibly not have happened without being part of this program. And I want to end my presentation by quoting someone else. I want to quote Michelle Obama because she once said, communities and countries and ultimately the world are only as strong as the health of their women. Thank you. Hi, I am Anna and to be honest this is my first ever giving presentation ever given presentation in English. I'm very nervous but my true friends Diepl and ChatGPT helped me out yesterday. I will keep it short and simple. And on the last slide, the end of my presentation, I have CAD content for you. So I hope you will have a pleasant time with me. St. Pölten is the capital of Lower Austria. And it's about 60 kilometers away from Vienna. And our radio station is kind of a mixed station kind of hybrid a student radio station and a community radio station it was founded by the students of the University of Applied Sciences in St. Pölten in 2001 first as a web radio station and since 2002 we've got a terrestrial frequency and about six or seven years later it turned into a community radio station. So the financing of the student part and the community part is strictly separated but if you listen to the program you should get the impression that it's a unified program made of committed people. Yeah that's it. The title of our project is public health in a digital world and the aim of this program was to inform people, also the listeners, about both the pros and cons of digitalization in the health sector. Because of course, as in many areas of life, digitization brings opportunities and challenges. On the one side, the technological development makes treatments and diagnosis better, like data-driven diagnosis for instance, and digital access to healthcare services makes processes more efficient, more faster and less complicated for the general population. But on the other hand, there are vulnerable groups like older people or people with disabilities and for them the increasing uh increasing digitization in the healthcare sector can cause problems so we wanted to show both sides this is our team four radio makers of the campus and city radio St. Pölten, each with their own show in the regular program. So far, before this project, I asked four of them, each of the four have professional background, lots of professional experience in healthcare so i asked them to join in and i was glad that they said yes we have lena she's a dietitian she made her degree at the university in saint polton and normally she's doing a show about nutrition we have iris iris is in the audience. Hi, Iris. Yeah, glad you're here. She is a kindergarten teacher, but I will come to that later. She's also very good in communication with older people. We have, as mentioned, from Juliana Cosima. Cosima is a professional life and social counselor, but in this project she took the role of the affected person. She is visually impaired, she suffers from degenerative eye disease, so she is almost blind, and for her the increasing digitized services in healthcare, that is really a problem for her. Tobias Bauer is a nurse and I am the kind of project manager in this project. As Juliana mentioned before, we started with the workshop, days with one who gave us theoretical inputs on the topic we had two great days and i'm really looking forward to the to part two of the workshop in Innsbruck in the beginning of February the second meeting of the team was for producing the jingle The second meeting of the team was for producing the jingle and I also want to play the jingle for you and you can try to find out if you recognize the noises of digitization in public health are used for the jingle. Public Health in a Digital World Gesundheit digital Welche Chancen und welche Herausforderungen bringt die Digitalisierung im Gesundheitsbereich? Ein Sendungsschwerpunkt unterstützt vom Community-Medien-Institut COM commit und dem community media forum europe jetzt im campus und city radio von pölten so die türen ist es so rekord neistat i think every mother knows the CTG it's I have that on my sheet Cardiotocography the baby's heart beats in the mother's womb the unborn baby I really love this noise but the second sound I don't like that all who knows it was MRT. Yeah, MRT. Yeah, magnet, what's the word? I don't have it. Magnetic resonance tomography, I think. It's like that. So we produced seven episodes. We had two live shows. The first live show, it's on the right side. I did myself. The guy on the photo is a researcher of the university and he is an expert in digital health and digital healthcare. So the university has a master's degree on digital healthcare and we talked about the topic in general the advantages the state of the technical development the usability problem and his vision of a digitized healthcare services for everyone for all people and on the left side, we have the picture to the live show of Iris. She invited pensionists of local pensionist, moment. No? I don't know, a pensioneer's association. And they were talking about the topic and Iris told me yesterday, the one realization was that they know very well that they have to help themselves. That they have to deal with digital access and not just wait for someone to help them and that's what they do they try to help themselves if they've got problem like using health services on the smartphone or on the internet and i think the live show was two hours and a half really good work three years is gotten three hours and a half. Really good work. Three, here is three hours. And something I forgot to mention, because you're seeing the screenshot of the LinkedIn, I'm also the host of the official podcast with the researcher, we could also distribute via the channels of the university to gain more, even more listeners. The recorded programs, we had one program about health information from the internet. Lena was doing that. She met a bunch of people from from the Gen Z, the Generation Z. It's not a surprise to get their information about health, nutrition, fitness, whatever from the internet and she told me she was surprised how good they were in checking sources if if they've got trustful sources and the accuracy um it's a pity she didn't make any photo of this situation um then we had two shows what works well um from tobias he had an interview with the doctor on variables and health apps health applications it was very funny because he so the doctor said oh so many people are coming to me in my cancer day consultation hours and they say oh doctor I've got a heart disease. My smartphone told me so. And yeah. So we've got to improve these applications. And the second was about virtual reality. I forgot my glasses. Virtual reality in retirement homes. Chat GPT told me so. I didn't notice this word. So it was a research program and the interview was with the researcher. All the people did get the chance to make trips, like holiday trips, while these virtual reality glasses, and they really liked it. On the other hand, what works badly, these are the two shows from Cosima. In the first shows, she talked about the contrasts or the disadvantages that increasing digitization causes through the internet, so like isolation and depression and being addicted to online games and such things, she told two very emotional stories of her clients. One was about identity theft and what does it mean to you if that something happens if you're the victim and the other story was about young women who was victim of deepfakes. I don't know if you know what that is. So someone put videos of her being naked in the internet. And that's really something that does something to you. And the second shows, it's about her experiences by herself when she's going to the doctor and she has to sign small print, really small printed documents there at the doctor. asking seriously now why we have digitalization why cannot I sign it at home and send it to you by email and another story is I I was once in a hospital outpatient clinic with her helping her because she wasn't called by voice to come into the doctor's office but her name was written very small on a display in the room that was also that's really a problem for her she cannot solve that situation on her own yes my learnings like juliana said time management wasn't that easy because all of the four people, of course, they have their day jobs and it was hard to organize the first meeting. So we started with the workshop in July and another learning. No, I think everything else was very good and I'm impressed of the good work my team did and I'm invited to listen to the shows we've seen the the CBA that's the platform where I played the jingle it's called cba it's a cultural broadcast icave cba.online where you can listen about i think i don't know hundred of thousand or 160 000 shows of the community radio stations No cat content, I'm sorry. Thank you for your attention. Ladies and gentlemen, this is our last Q&A for today. Let's make it count. I'm having issues with asking any questions right now because I'm so involved with these two partners myself, so you have to help me out on this one. Any questions? Yes, Birgitte. First of all, thank you very much. It was like it has been all day. Really interesting to get a little bit behind the surface and understand your processes. I would like to hear if you had any audience feedback as a feminist and woman and all of that with the women's health. I'm very interested in. But also on the digital side, I a I have an old mom and she struggles she comes calls me and cries and says I've been sitting with help services on the telephone all day so it would be interesting to hear how your audiences have reacted who wants to go first you know what I'm just gonna give you my mind. So for us, we had feedback on social media mainly and on the CBA of course. Usually people don't call us for feedback. Sometimes we get an email. But for this one we had really good feedback on social media, like people saying, oh thank you for doing this and this is so important. Or I had people telling me personally oh I I can relate because this and that happened to me so I had like women coming to me and telling me their stories which was really inspiring but also shocking but yeah so we mainly had feedback on social media yeah I have older people in my show, they were 60 plus and we have both sides. We have one woman who goes and sits 10 minutes every day and learning how to do with the internet. And we have the other side, we have a woman, her husband has died. And then she had to do all herself and she had no experience with these ones. And I had to stop her in her speaking because she broke down and had really, really cried. And then you have seen at the photo a young boy at the picture, and this was her uncle, my son. And he also said, Oma, I want to help you, but it's not really easy. So we have both sides. I want to help you, but it's not really easy. So we have both sides. We have the women who done it herself and see it every day, and we have the other side who can't. She really can't. Do you want to add something, Anna? I posted our program also in my Instagram page and I get a lot of messages and it was about from immigrant women because we did a program about abortion and it is so that in Austria all the women should pay for abortion it's and it's like it's legal till 12 weeks but it's like illegal because we should pay for it. And we did interviews and also we gave information that there is a lot of help for those women that they can get a money for this and a lot of women told us thank you for this information because they didn't know that there is a lot of financial help for a woman like in i mean in this situation that um it's really expensive in austria um the woman should pay 800 or 1000 euro for abortion yeah yeah unfortunately thank you okay um how to continue after such a hard topic. Yes, there is another question. Thank you. Yes, I realize, thank you for your presentations, but I realize that none of you has mentioned ethnic minorities. It's because you don't work with them in your radio stations, or you avoid them especially. I want to tell you, I'm from Austria, but I am migrant you I'm from Austria but I am migrant I'm from Georgia yeah and it's located between Asia and Europe yeah and we did our program because also in Georgia because for us was very, very important to hear the opinion of migrants. Because here in Austria there is an open society and Georgia is a bit closed society with patriarchal minds and all the migrants, I mean not all all but it's like 80% of migrants they are coming from those societies where the tamil like abortion is a really a taboo and for us was it very important to hear what are thinking about abortions migrants too and we did it I mean it's very important for our radio too and we have a more than 15 languages yeah that's what I wanted to say as well so like coming to like the station in general like Sofia already said we have more than 15 different languages and we have like countless people from everywhere in the world doing radio at our station of course there is always room for improvement but we're we're especially focusing on minorities so they like always they come first so if if for example I don't know if I would be going there born in Austria speaking German with an idea and a migrant woman the same age would come with the same idea she would she would be first so just to give you like a general level it We didn't have migrant people in this production team, but that wasn't an intention. It was by chance. Just these four people, I thought they would be good in producing to health care topics. But we too in St. Gallen have migrant people who do their shows in different languages. So it was just not in that project. Thank you. Another question? That's what I thought. Thank you very much for the lovely presentations.