Showing posts with label survey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label survey. Show all posts

Friday, 25 March 2016

Princess Health and Survey of Cincy-area students, including some in Kenton County, finds pot and vaping more popular than cigs; drug use down. Princessiccia

Students in Greater Cincinnati, including Northern Kentucky, are more likely to use marijuana and electronic vapor products than cigarettes, according to a drug-use survey of students in the region.

Graph from PreventionFirst report
The survey found that students in the area were most likely to use alcohol (16.3 percent) within the past 30 days, followed by marijuana (11.7 percent), electronic vapor products (13.4 percent), tobacco (8.2 percent) and non-prescribed prescription drugs (4.6 percent).

This was the first year a question was included about electronic vapor products in the biennial surveys by PreventionFirst (formerly the Coalition for a Drug-Free Greater Cincinnati), a comprehensive effort to reduce adolescent alcohol and drug use.

The good news is that most students are not using alcohol, tobacco or other drugs, says the report.

The study surveyed nearly 40,000 students in grades seven through 12 from 88 public and private schools in several counties in Greater Cincinnati and Kentucky's Kenton County. They were asked whether they'd used any of 21 drugs.

The survey found that use of alcohol, tobacco and marijuana have declined significantly since 2000: alcohol down 46 percent, tobacco down 61 percent and marijuana declining 22 percent. Since 2012, non-prescribed prescription drug use has declined 29 percent.

It found that students' perception of the harm that alcohol can do has increased, while they were less concerned about marijuana.

With marijuana, as students get older "their perception of harm decreases, and use increases," said PreventionFirst CEO Mary Haag told Terry DeMio  of the Cincinnati Enquirer.

"Marijuana has become very prevalent and it's becoming more so," Hamilton County Commissioner Dennis Deters, who chairs the Hamilton County Heroin Coalition, told DeMio. "It's dangerous to our children and it enhances their risk when they become adults for serious addiction."

The report calls age 13 a "pivotal age" because this is when first drug use often occurs in students.

The report also finds that peer and parental disapproval rates are at an all-time high.

"We know how important friends and parents are in a young person's life," Haag said in the news release. "Students whose peers and family express disapproval are more likely to make the healthy choice to not use drugs and alcohol."

Saturday, 2 May 2015

Princess Health andMost women are unaware of female-specific stroke symptoms and risks, according to a national survey by Ohio State.Princessiccia

Princess Health andMost women are unaware of female-specific stroke symptoms and risks, according to a national survey by Ohio State.Princessiccia

Most women are unaware of the symptoms and risks of stroke for females, according to a national survey by the Ohio State University's Wexner Medical Center. The survey found that just 11 percent of the 1,000 respondents knew that pregnancy, lupus, migraine headaches and oral contraception or hormone replacement therapy are female-specific stroke risks.

Also, only 10 percent of those surveyed knew that hiccups and atypical chest pain with or followed by typical stroke symptoms are early warning signs. According to the National Stroke Association, stroke is the third leading cause of death for women, and Diana Greene-Chandos, a neurologist and director of the neuroscience critical care at Ohio State's Wexner Medical Center, said, "We have a ways to go when it comes to educating women about stroke and their unique risk factors."

Other symptoms unique to women include dizziness that is not class vertigo, headaches, atypical chest pain and/or numbness of the body, especially if one side is more numb than the other. Early recognition and treatment are key for strokes.

"Women do not think they are going to have a stroke," said Greene-Chandos. "They think of it as a man's disease." The reality is that 60 percent of stroke deaths occur in females and 40 percent for males. Every year, 137,000 Americans die from a stroke. Smoking, failing to exercise and having high blood pressure are risk factors for both men and women. To take an assessment created by Ohio State's stroke experts to determine risk of stroke, click here.

Monday, 7 April 2014

Princess Health and Princess Health andKentucky ranks 49th in well-being survey, and Eastern Kentucky's congressional district ranks last in the nation.Princessiccia

Kentucky ranked 49th in the nation in a survey that measures perception of well-being, ranking higher than West Virginia and lower than Mississippi, and its 5th Congressional District ranked dead last in the nation.

"The survey assessed people's emotional and physical health; behavior that affects health, such as smoking or exercising; job satisfaction and access to basic needs, including food and housing; and their outlook on life," Bill Estep reports for the Lexington Herald-Leader. The Gallup Organization and Healthways, a Tennessee-based company that provides services to improve well-being, administered the survey.

Kentucky has ranked 49th each year except for 2008, the year the index began, when it ranked 48th. Factors contributing to this result include high poverty, top smoking rates, many uninsured people, high depression rates, drug abuse, obesity and other health issues. "Our health status is dismal in Kentucky," state Health Commissioner Stephanie Mayfield told Estep.

Louise Howell, a consultant for Kentucky River Community Care, said Eastern Kentucky has "profound health disparities." Harlan County lost 13,054 years of individual lives due to premature death, according to the survey. In Breathitt County, only 25.1 percent of people have access to satisfactory exercise opportunities. In Martin County, 37.4 people smoked.

Shaping Our Appalachian Region, a program Gov. Steve Beshear and 5th District Rep. Hal Rogers began last year, is forming strategic plans to improve the region's economy through expansion and diversification. This summer the public meeting will take place to brainstorm ideas and promote involvement. "I think this is the toughest most difficult region we've worked in, ever," said Charles W. Fluharty, who heads the Rural Policy Research Institute and is interim executive director of SOAR. However, he said the region will benefit from people's awareness that the coal-depend region has to try to a new strategy, Estep writes.

Dee Davis, president of the Center for Rural Strategies in Whitesburg, told Estep: "People realize if we've got any chance at all we've got to seize the reins; we've got to diversify the economy." (Read more)

Monday, 28 January 2013

Princess Health and Ky. parents strongly favor increasing school dropout age, a step that could make future high-school students healthier.Princessiccia

Princess Health and Ky. parents strongly favor increasing school dropout age, a step that could make future high-school students healthier.Princessiccia

A statewide poll has found that Kentucky parents overwhelmingly favor increasing the state�s school dropout age, and doing so might help future high-school students' health, according to the Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky, which sponsored the poll.   

After being told the legislature may raise the dropout age to 18 from 16, 85 percent of Kentucky parents said they favor the move, and 77 percent of parents said they strongly favored it.

Besides their homes, school is where children spend most of their time, and the overall health and well-being of students affect their ability to learn.  Healthy kids learn better and students� academic achievement in turn affects their ability to be healthy and stay well in the future.



�People may not realize that education is a health issue, but research tells us that completing high school is directly related to our health status in later life,� said Dr. Susan Zepeda, President and CEO of the foundation. �Increasing the dropout age is one strategy aimed at improving the graduation rate in the state. We hope this polling data will encourage a deeper conversation among parents, education experts and policy makers to explore this and other strategies to help our children succeed at school and lead a more healthy life.�


The dropout-age question was part of the Kentucky Parent Survey, which provided a snapshot of parental views on a number of issues involving health care, school and home life. It surveyed parents, step-parents, grandparents, foster parents or other legal guardians of children in Kentucky.

The poll was conducted in July and August 2012 by the Center for Survey Research at the University of Virginia.  More than 1,000 parents and guardians of children under 18 from throughout the state were interviewed by telephone, including landlines and cell phones.  The survey's margin of error is plus or minus 3 percentage points. 

Kentucky Health News is an independent service of the Institute for Rural Journalism and Community Issues at the University of Kentucky, with support from the Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky.