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AXIOS — HHS Reports Significant increase in Black, Latino ACA healthcare enrollment since 2020 — March 10, 2023

HHS Reports Significant increase in Black, Latino ACA healthcare enrollment since 2020 — HHS Reports Significant increase in Black, Latino ACA healthcare enrollment since 2020 — March 10, 2023

When the Affordable Care Act was first implemented, data indicated that Black and Hispanic populations were not enrolling at high rates, in part due to historical distrust of the federal government, according to Nadereh Pourat, the associate director of the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research.

Features: Nadereh Pourat

The Trace — Data Point — March 10, 2023

Data Point — Data Point — March 10, 2023

24 percent — the share of immigrants living in California who told UCLA researchers they’re “very worried” about falling victim to gun violence. That’s nearly double the rate of the state’s overall population. [California Health Interview Survey]

Features: California Health Interview Survey (CHIS), Gun Violence and Gun Safety

Daily Beast — How big data could solve food inequity or make things worse — March 10, 2023

How big data could solve food inequity or make things worse — How big data could solve food inequity or make things worse — March 10, 2023

According to the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research, 1 in 10 adults in Los Angeles County has type 2 diabetes, while the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention states 11.3 percent of American adults are diabetic. There is a higher percentage of people who are overweight—with a body-mass index between 25 and 29.9—in Los Angeles (35.9 percent than nationally 35.2 percent). Nevertheless, obesity—when the BMI is 30 and higher—is less prevalent in LA County than America as a whole: 23.5 percent to 28.9 percent.

Features: Ninez A. Ponce, Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Program, California Health Interview Survey (CHIS)

LAist — What You Need To Know Today: Brown Girls Climb, Expansion of Prison Release Program, Best LA Sunsets — March 10, 2023

What You Need To Know Today: Brown Girls Climb, Expansion of Prison Release Program, Best LA Sunsets — What You Need To Know Today: Brown Girls Climb, Expansion of Prison Release Program, Best LA Sunsets — March 10, 2023

Californians — both teens and adults — have had a hard time throughout the pandemic, according to a recent UCLA California Health Interview Survey. In 2021, almost a third of adults experienced “serious suicide ideation” compared to about 24% in 2019. And about 26% of teens said that they had not received the counseling they needed in the past year.

Features: California Health Interview Survey (CHIS), Mental Health Program

LAist — It's Not Only COVID-19: Californians Have Been Facing A 'Mental Health Pandemic' — March 10, 2023

It's Not Only COVID-19: Californians Have Been Facing A 'Mental Health Pandemic' — It's Not Only COVID-19: Californians Have Been Facing A 'Mental Health Pandemic' — March 10, 2023

UCLA’s California Health Interview Survey highlights an “urgent need for mental health services,” according to a press release from UCLA’s Center for Health Policy Research. The survey was conducted in 2021.

Features: California Health Interview Survey (CHIS), Mental Health Program

KNX-AM/FM — COVID-19: Poor public health data slows an effective response — March 10, 2023

COVID-19: Poor public health data slows an effective response — COVID-19: Poor public health data slows an effective response — March 10, 2023

"Early in the epidemic, a lot of the data did not have a person’s race or ethnicity,” Mays said. “When data is not collected in a systematic way, when people don’t prioritize making sure a record has race included in it, it really slows down the response, particularly in a public health emergency."

Features: Vickie Mays, Mental Health Program

KCBS-FM — COVID-19: Flaws in U.S. public health data systems demonstrated during pandemic — March 10, 2023

COVID-19: Flaws in U.S. public health data systems demonstrated during pandemic — COVID-19: Flaws in U.S. public health data systems demonstrated during pandemic — March 10, 2023

"One thing we need to do right away is to target who was experiencing this the worst,” Mays said. “We need to decisions made at the state, the federal level, about what is acceptable quality data, meaning you cannot send a form in if it is missing certain variables.”

Features: Vickie Mays, Mental Health Program

MyNewsLA — New UCLA survey finds increase in suicidal thoughts among young adults — March 10, 2023

New UCLA survey finds increase in suicidal thoughts among young adults — New UCLA survey finds increase in suicidal thoughts among young adults — March 10, 2023

“Our findings show that more people are experiencing serious psychological distress, more people are in need of professional help and more people are reporting moderate or severe impairment in their work, social lives, relationships and daily activities,” Ponce said. Also quoted was Todd Hughes, director of the California Health Interview Survey, which conducted the research: “As the largest and most diverse state, California is often looked at as a model that strives toward health equity,” Hughes said. “However, the data show there is still a need to address some of the inequities in

Features: Ninez A. Ponce, Todd Hughes, California Health Interview Survey (CHIS), Mental Health Program

Times of San Diego — New UCLA Survey Finds Increase in Suicidal Thoughts Among Young Adults — March 10, 2023

New UCLA Survey Finds Increase in Suicidal Thoughts Among Young Adults — New UCLA Survey Finds Increase in Suicidal Thoughts Among Young Adults — March 10, 2023

“Our findings show that more people are experiencing serious psychological distress, more people are in need of professional help and more people are reporting moderate or severe impairment in their work, social lives, relationships and daily activities,” Ponce said.

Features: Ninez A. Ponce, Todd Hughes, California Health Interview Survey (CHIS), Mental Health Program

Yahoo News — Reducing oral health disparities: Learn from experts in CDA’s live virtual event series beginning — March 10, 2023

Reducing oral health disparities: Learn from experts in CDA’s live virtual event series beginning — Reducing oral health disparities: Learn from experts in CDA’s live virtual event series beginning — March 10, 2023

Health disparities in California, including in oral health care, disproportionately affect historically underserved communities due to systemic, social and economic inequities. According to the California Health Interview Survey in 2017-18 from the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research, 27% of California adults reported their oral health as poor while 21% reported their overall health as poor. Looking deeper, 21% of white adult Californians reported their oral health as poor compared to 30% of Black Californians and 34% of Latinx Californians.