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mHealth Intelligence

Race, Age, Languare Barriers Fuel Telehealth Delivery Disparities

The UCLA Latino Policy and Politics Institute conducted a study that shows healthcare disparities linked to telehealth use during the COVID-19 pandemic resulted from race, age, language, and technology access barriers.

Arturo Vargas Bustamante
Reuters

California massacres heighten immigrants' fears of U.S. gun violence

About 9.3% of Asian immigrants keep guns in their homes in California, compared with 5.6% of Latino immigrants and 12% of white immigrants, said Ninez Ponce.

Gun Violence and Gun Safety
Ninez A. Ponce
UCLA Newsroom

Telehealth, key part of pandemic-era care, should be more accessible for more patients

A study by the UCLA Latino Policy and Politics Institute found that since COVID-19 emerged, language barriers have prevented Latino and Asian patients in Los Angeles from making full use of telehealth services.

Arturo Vargas Bustamante
FOX 11 LA

In Depth: Rockhaven Sanitarium

Mental illness is sorely underfunded. California is actually one of the leaders because we have what's known as the millionaire's tax, which is the mental health services act, which gives us more resources than the typical state to deal with mental health problems, and you see, we're not getting it right. The first thing we need to do is look at how we finance mental health, some people think that if people get all of the treatment that they want, that we will break the bank. And that's not a good way to think about it. Instead what we need to do is when people go to their primary care setting

Mental Health Program
Vickie Mays
Capital & Main

Gov. Newsom Punts on Addressing Food Insecurity for some of California's Most Vulnerable

In a four-year California Health Interview Survey from 2017 to 2020, 45% of undocumented immigrants said they were affected by food insecurity, and the figure for those age 17 or younger was 64%

California Health Interview Survey (CHIS), Food Insecurity
San Francisco Chronicle

These two major shifts sparked a mental health crisis among LGBTQ youth in California

One-third of California’s middle and high school students experienced serious psychological distress between 2019 and 2021, according to the California Health Interview Survey, an annual statewide survey led by the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research. According to experts, those stakes are higher for LGBTQ+ students, many of whom relied on spaces like school-based gay-straight alliance clubs, or sessions led by LGBTQ+ focused nonprofit organizations, to support their mental health.

California Health Interview Survey (CHIS), Mental Health Program
Business Wire

The MolinaCares Accord Donates $50,000 to SHIELDS for Families in Support of Initiative to Combat Perinatal Depression

The grant supports the Health Equity Challenge (HEC), a program developed by MolinaCares in partnership with the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research as a part of the MolinaCares California Equity and Accessibility Initiative. The initiative launched in 2021 to advance health equity across the state of California. The HEC gave UCLA students an opportunity to partner with local community-based organizations to create innovative solutions to local issues. Two finalists were selected, including Alma Lopez, a UCLA graduate student.

Health Equity Challenge
The Daily Bruin

The Quad: Although pandemic left lasting impacts on Bruins, students have proven resilient

Daniel Eisenberg, a health policy and management professor, said the pandemic contributed to a significant, but not massive, increase in mental illness diagnoses. "We see about twice as many students that are reporting symptoms of depression or anxiety, but there's also a positive trend to that," Eisenberg said. "Students are reporting that they're using mental health services, which typically includes therapy or medication, so that there is an expansion of access to health care.

Mental Health Program
Daniel Eisenberg
Los Angeles Times

This can only go for so long.' Patients needing routine care pack MLK emergency department

"More than three-quarters of patients in MLK's emergency department rely on Medi-Cal -- The California Medicaid program -- and roughly 10% are uninsured, according to hospital figures. Medicaid programs reimburse doctors at lower rates than private insurers, which can "reduce the number of providers that are willing to participate," said Nadereh Pourat, associate director of the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research."

Health Economics and Evaluation Research (HEER) Program
Nadereh Pourat
Health Affairs

Health Affairs In 2021: Editor’s Picks

Two separate studies by UCLA CHPR researchers have been recognized among the top 10 articles in 2021 by the scientific journal Health Affairs:

The Effect Of The Affordable Care Act On Cancer Detection Among The Near-Elderly by Fabian Duarte, Srikanth Kadiyala, Gerald F. Kominski, and Antonia Riveros

Fabian Duarte and coauthors use an interesting “difference in discontinuities” approach to show that the increase in insurance coverage among adults ages 60–64 due to the Affordable Care Act greatly increased rates of cancer detection for this population. Fifty-nine additional incidents of cancer

Srikanth Kadiyala, Gerald F. Kominski, Corrina Moucheraud