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BELatina — California To Become The First State To Offer Free Health Care to Low-Income Undocumented Immigrants — March 10, 2023

California To Become The First State To Offer Free Health Care to Low-Income Undocumented Immigrants — California To Become The First State To Offer Free Health Care to Low-Income Undocumented Immigrants — March 10, 2023

California will become the first state to guarantee free health care to all low-income undocumented immigrants. The move will cover an additional 764,000 people at an eventual cost of about $2.7 billion a year. “Most people who go to the emergency room have insurance and are not worried about providing documents,” says Nadereh Pourat, Ph.D. director of research at the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research and a member of UCLA’s Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center Division of Cancer Prevention and Research. On the other hand, “the undocumented who end up in the emergency room have often

Features: Nadereh Pourat

UCLA Newsroom — Barriers keep NHPI and LGBTQ smokers from breathing free — March 10, 2023

Barriers keep NHPI and LGBTQ smokers from breathing free — Barriers keep NHPI and LGBTQ smokers from breathing free — March 10, 2023

Two groups that have high rates of smoking and vaping — the Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander community and the LGBTQ community ­— have specific hurdles that prevent them from quitting: the cost of cessation therapies and a lack of culturally specific care, according to a pair of reports from the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research. “Examining the smoking behaviors of specific communities is essential to understanding their unique needs,” said Sean Tan, a senior public administration analyst at the center and lead author of both reports. “We found that many NHPI and LGBTQ smokers who

Features: Sean Tan, California Health Interview Survey (CHIS)

ABC 10 — ‘A historic moment’ | California to be 1st to expand Medi-Cal to all eligible undocumented residents — March 10, 2023

‘A historic moment’ | California to be 1st to expand Medi-Cal to all eligible undocumented residents — ‘A historic moment’ | California to be 1st to expand Medi-Cal to all eligible undocumented residents — March 10, 2023

The new state budget ... plans to expand Medi-Cal coverage to more undocumented Californians ages 26 to 49 no later than Jan. 1, 2024. Health advocates said about 700,000 more people will now qualify for the program – the largest group of undocumented residents in the state.

UCLA Newsroom — UCLA survey quantifies COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy among Californians — March 10, 2023

UCLA survey quantifies COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy among Californians — UCLA survey quantifies COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy among Californians — March 10, 2023

“Since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, the California Health Interview Survey has released survey data early to help show the impact of COVID-19 on Californians,” said Todd Hughes, the survey director. “As mandates, guidelines and concerns have changed over the past two years, we have added new questions to CHIS to provide policymakers, community organizations, advocates and other stakeholders with data they can act on."

Features: Todd Hughes, California Health Interview Survey (CHIS)

CNN — Trends are shifting, but Covid-19 and its effects are still not equitable — March 10, 2023

Trends are shifting, but Covid-19 and its effects are still not equitable — Trends are shifting, but Covid-19 and its effects are still not equitable — March 10, 2023

The Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander Data Policy Lab at the University of California, Los Angeles has collected and analyzed Covid-19 data from states that have made it available and found that case and death rates for Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander were three times higher than those for Asians overall. "Our community has had the highest case and death rates than any other racial or ethnic group," program director 'Alisi Tulua said, and that gap has "widened by a lot" since this winter.

Features: 'Alisi Tulua, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander (NHPI) Data Policy Lab

Daily Bruin — UCLA-provided data reveals need to expand food assistance in California — March 10, 2023

UCLA-provided data reveals need to expand food assistance in California — UCLA-provided data reveals need to expand food assistance in California — March 10, 2023

Approximately 45% of noncitizens without legal permanent resident status experience food insecurity, according to the report.

The report also breaks down percentages of people experiencing food insecurity by age group, with 42% of noncitizens without legal permanent resident status age 50 and older, 46% of those 27 to 49 years old, 36% of those 18 to 26 years old and 64% of children under 17 being affected.

Susan Babey, a senior research scientist at the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research, said while it is important to address food insecurity, it is also important to remember that a lack

Features: Susan H. Babey, California Health Interview Survey (CHIS), Food Insecurity

ABC News — The difference in treating child victims of gun violence versus adults — March 10, 2023

The difference in treating child victims of gun violence versus adults — The difference in treating child victims of gun violence versus adults — March 10, 2023

Dr. Michael Rodriguez, a family physician and a professor at the David Geffen School of Medicine at the University of California, Los Angeles, said child patients may require different types of medication, or different doses depending on their weights and heights, as well as different levels of fluids.

Features: Michael Rodri­guez, Gun Violence and Gun Safety

World of DTC Marketing — Gun violence is a national health issue — March 10, 2023

Gun violence is a national health issue — Gun violence is a national health issue — March 10, 2023

Dr. Rodriguez has been studying gun violence for more than 25 years. He and Ninez Ponce, Ph.D., director of the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research and a professor at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, recently received a grant to explore the issue in California, where about 3,000 people died from gunfire in 2019 — 54% by suicide.

Features: Ninez A. Ponce, California Health Interview Survey (CHIS), Gun Violence and Gun Safety