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Axios — More older San Franciscans are using weed — December 18, 2023

More older San Franciscans are using weed — More older San Franciscans are using weed — December 18, 2023

In San Francisco, the share of people 65 and older who said they'd used cannabis within the last month increased from 10% in 2017 (a year after marijuana was legalized in California) to 13.7% in 2022, according to the latest data from the California Health Interview Survey.

Features: California Health Interview Survey (CHIS)

Phys.org — Recent immigrants saw biggest spike in mental distress as anti-immigrant sentiment increased, find researchers — December 18, 2023

Recent immigrants saw biggest spike in mental distress as anti-immigrant sentiment increased, find researchers — Recent immigrants saw biggest spike in mental distress as anti-immigrant sentiment increased, find researchers — December 18, 2023

Anti-immigrant rhetoric and policies are widely known to have harmful impacts on mental health, but a new policy brief from the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research has revealed large disparities in rates of serious psychological distress across immigrant subgroups in California.

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

WHYY — Navigating language and cultural barriers to access health care — December 12, 2023

Navigating language and cultural barriers to access health care — Navigating language and cultural barriers to access health care — December 12, 2023

Language barriers like these can lead to serious medical mistakes. They’re also hurdles for people who don’t speak English efficiently trying to access basic health care ... research shows that as the Latino population continues to increase in California, the number of Latino physicians who are culturally competent and speak Spanish is not meeting the demand. Arturo Vargas Bustamante, a health policy professor at UCLA’s School of Public Health, co-authored a report on this issue, The Latino Physician Crisis. 

Features: Arturo Vargas Bustamante

PolitiFact — GOP candidates' criticisms of ACA premiums leave out key pieces of health care puzzle — December 12, 2023

GOP candidates' criticisms of ACA premiums leave out key pieces of health care puzzle — GOP candidates' criticisms of ACA premiums leave out key pieces of health care puzzle — December 12, 2023

What Republicans such as Trump or DeSantis might try to do with the ACA remains to be seen. A repeal of the law could have far-reaching effects.

"About 55 million Americans would suddenly be uninsured, and insurance companies would once again be allowed to deny health insurance, or charge substantially higher premiums, to anyone with a pre-existing condition," said Gerald Kominski, senior fellow at the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research. "This may be the world ideologues want us to live in, but it would be a public health disaster."

Features: Gerald F. Kominski

Planetizen — Winter Fun at Los Angeles County Parks — December 5, 2023

Winter Fun at Los Angeles County Parks — Winter Fun at Los Angeles County Parks — December 5, 2023

The winter version of PAD provides extended hours and free recreational activities at 31 LA County parks, including snow days, sports, exercise classes, dancing, healthy cooking classes, movies, concerts, computer courses, health outreach, and social service resource fairs. According to a recent evaluation by the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research, 92 percent of people who attended a nighttime events program in L.A. County parks in the summer of 2022 felt safe. The program was also highly rated by attendees for giving them the chance to spend quality time with family. 

Features: Health Economics and Evaluation Research (HEER) Program

Fierce Healthcare — Blue Shield of California makes Wellvolution program available to Spanish speakers — December 5, 2023

Blue Shield of California makes Wellvolution program available to Spanish speakers — Blue Shield of California makes Wellvolution program available to Spanish speakers — December 5, 2023

Wellvolution, a digital health platform by Blue Shield of California, will now be more inclusive and accessible for Spanish speakers ... Hispanic communities in California are more likely to have difficulty finding a primary care doctor or specialist than other groups, likely due to language barriers, according to data from the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research as compiled by The California Health Care Almanac.

Features: California Health Interview Survey (CHIS)

The China Press — UCLA survey: The epidemic remains a challenge — April 5, 2024

UCLA survey: The epidemic remains a challenge — UCLA survey: The epidemic remains a challenge — April 5, 2024

The China Press wrote about the release of the 2023 California Health Interview Survey focusing on the lingering effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Features: California Health Interview Survey (CHIS)

UCLA Newsroom — Despite stronger fears of gun violence, California immigrants far less likely to own firearms than citizens — November 29, 2023

Despite stronger fears of gun violence, California immigrants far less likely to own firearms than citizens — Despite stronger fears of gun violence, California immigrants far less likely to own firearms than citizens — November 29, 2023

Among Latinos and Asians living in California, immigrants are less likely than citizens to own a firearm and more likely to report being afraid of becoming a victim of gun violence, according to a new study from the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research. "This study shows that the immigrant population's concern about gun violence is significant."

Features: Ninez A. Ponce, California Health Interview Survey (CHIS)

Stat News — Invisible in the data: Broad ‘Asian American’ category obscures health disparities — November 21, 2023

Invisible in the data: Broad ‘Asian American’ category obscures health disparities — Invisible in the data: Broad ‘Asian American’ category obscures health disparities — November 21, 2023

In medical research and public health in the United States, people with Asian ancestry are almost always grouped into a single racial category. They seem to be doing very well — better than white Americans in important categories.

But separate out subgroups of Asian Americans and outcomes are far poorer... In a 2020 study, Ninez Ponce, who directs UCLA’s Center for Health Policy Research, found at least one disparity that was disguised by aggregation in every Asian subgroup she and her colleagues examined. “You cannot have health equity without data equity,” said Ponce. 

Features: Ninez A. Ponce, California Health Interview Survey (CHIS)

Medical Xpress — Report: Family caregivers share common job but diverse experiences — November 20, 2023

Report: Family caregivers share common job but diverse experiences — Report: Family caregivers share common job but diverse experiences — November 20, 2023

Researchers discovered that compared to caregivers in other surveys—such as the California Health Interview Survey and the Caregiving in the United States survey — the California Caregiver Resource Centers caregivers tended to be older (about 40% were over 65) and more diverse. Slightly fewer than half reported their race and ethnicity as other than white and non-Hispanic.

Features: California Health Interview Survey (CHIS)