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National Health Law Program

Advancing Health Equity Through Disaggregated Race/Ethnicity Data

In fact, data from the California Health Interview Survey show significant differences in health for select Asian subgroups, such as greater prevalence of high blood pressure, asthma, heart disease, and delayed medication use for Filipinos compared to Asians overall.

California Health Interview Survey (CHIS)
My News LA

Survey: 32% of Californians won't take COVID vaccine boosters

The survey, published by the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research, found that California adults who have not completed the primary vaccine series against COVID-19 did not do so for several reasons: 48% think a vaccine for COVID is unnecessary, 45% worried about side effects, and 44% think the vaccine was developed too quickly.

California Health Interview Survey (CHIS)
94.7 THE WAVE

1 in 3 Californians won't get another COVID booster: survey

The survey, published by the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research, found that California adults who have not completed the primary vaccine series against COVID-19 did not do so for several reasons: 48% think a vaccine for COVID is unnecessary, 45% worried about side effects, and 44% think the vaccine was developed too quickly.

California Health Interview Survey (CHIS)
The Antelope Valley Times

Survey: 32% of Californians won't take COVID vaccine boosters

The survey, published by the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research, found that California adults who have not completed the primary vaccine series against COVID-19 did not do so for several reasons: 48% think a vaccine for COVID is unnecessary, 45% worried about side effects, and 44% think the vaccine was developed too quickly.

California Health Interview Survey (CHIS)
KNX News

1 in 3 Californians won't get another COVID booster: survey

The survey, published by the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research, found that California adults who have not completed the primary vaccine series against COVID-19 did not do so for several reasons: 48% think a vaccine for COVID is unnecessary, 45% worried about side effects, and 44% think the vaccine was developed too quickly.

California Health Interview Survey (CHIS)
ABC 7 Los Angeles

Coronavirus: Socal Impact

A new survey says nearly a third of adults in California say they would decline any additional COVID vaccine doses. The poll conducted by the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research also found that 22% of adults who completed the primary vaccine series have not received any additional doses, and 33% of adults say they do not have an N95 or KN95 mask more than half of them saying they would not be able to get one because they are too expensive.

California Health Interview Survey (CHIS)
Web Today

Survey: 32% of Californians won't take COVID vaccine boosters

The survey, published by the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research, found that California adults who have not completed the primary vaccine series against COVID-19 did not do so for several reasons: 48% think a vaccine for COVID is unnecessary, 45% worried about side effects, and 44% think the vaccine was developed too quickly.

California Health Interview Survey (CHIS)
My Science

92% of attendees feel safe at long-running L.A. County parks program

Ninety-two percent of people who attended a nighttime events program in Los Angeles county parks in the summer of 2022 felt safe, according to a new evaluation by the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research.

Health Economics and Evaluation Research (HEER) Program, Los Angeles County Parks After Dark (PAD) Evaluation
Nadereh Pourat
UCLA Newsroom

92% of attendees feel safe at long-running L.A. county parks program

Ninety-two percent of people who attended a nighttime events program in Los Angeles county parks in the summer of 2022 felt safe, according to a new evaluation by the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research.

Health Economics and Evaluation Research (HEER) Program, Los Angeles County Parks After Dark (PAD) Evaluation
Nadereh Pourat
19th News

California's largest school district is spending millions to protect kids from climate change

Schools without green coverage tend to be in neighborhoods that lack shade, and those communities are disproportionately home to people of color. A peer-reviewed study by UCLA public health researchers published in the journal Environment International in March found that two-thirds of Los Angeles County's Black and Latinx populations live in places with scant green coverage and lower average life expectancies.

Michael Jerrett