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KPBS

Want to fix systemic gun violence? Treat it as a public health issue, experts say

Dr. Michael Rodriguez and Dr. Ninez Ponce of the Fielding School of Public Health at UCLA joined Midday Edition on Tuesday to talk about gun violence as a public health issue. Rodriguez has a good quote "there are more safety policies and regulations around teddy bears than there are for guns and keeping them safe in the home." "We need to look at guns as a consumer product that is dangerous, and when there's access to guns then there's a risk that someone will be injured, if not killed by that gun."

Features: Ninez A. Ponce, Gun Violence and Gun Safety

UCLA Health

New research presented in tackling gun violence as a public health epidemic

These statistics were among those presented at "Addressing Gun Violence as a Public Health Epidemic," a symposium held Feb. 13 by the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research. The half-day virtual symposium featured emerging research on various aspects of gun violence and discussions with leaders from national and local organizations advocating for policy change and public safety.

Features: Ninez A. Ponce, Gun Violence and Gun Safety, E.R. Brown Symposium

UCLA Newsroom

UCLA researchers receive grants to study needs of California's Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders

Ninez Ponce and colleagues at the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research received $161,000 for a study to address the gap in data for Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander communities through the construction of a new measure to better indicate the needs of the state's NHPI population.

Features: Ninez A. Ponce, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander (NHPI) Data Policy Lab

UCLA Newsroom

Study reveals extent of pandemic-related hardship among Asian Americans, Pacific Islanders

Accessing health care, including mental health services, became much tougher for California's Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders during the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a report published today by the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research.

Features: Ninez A. Ponce

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.

Features: Ninez A. Ponce, Gun Violence and Gun Safety

State of Reform

2021 California Health Interview Survey data reveals health equity gaps

A new report from the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research highlights the impact of the 2021 California Health Interview Survey (CHIS) results, the nation’s largest state health survey.

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

UCLA Health Connect

Latest shootings underscore gun violence as a public health issue

"Gun violence kills people. It also injures many more people and maims people and provides them with disabilities for life."

Features: Ninez A. Ponce, Gun Violence and Gun Safety

Fox 11

In Depth: Youth and Mental Health

Segment One: Vickie Mays is a professor in the Department of Psychology at UCLA and Dr. Ninez Ponce is the principal investigator of a study by UCLA’s Center for Health Policy discuss that study with Hal. The findings show that the mental health of young people- as young as 13- has taken a serious hit since the COVID-19 pandemic. "The news isn't good as far as mental health for youth," Ponce said. This data is actually bringing attention to the problem ... What we're getting from this is the alert. Minority population impact? explain. Vickie Mays: The UCLA CHPR goes out of its way to make sure

Features: Ninez A. Ponce, Vickie Mays

Spectrum News One

Police Encounters, housing insecurity impact mental health in California

"The impact of the pandemic has been especially pronounced for young adults,” Hughes said. “A set of potentially traumatic experiences that occur when we are young may be the root cause of some of the most common, serious and costly health and social challenges facing our state.

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

Daily Beast

How big data could solve food inequity or make things worse

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)