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editorials - > Editorials -> County’s health report card grim
County’s health report card grim

PUBLISHED 5/20/08 ------

Living in Kern County can be hazardous to your health. That’s one way to look at the findings in a new report on public health from the Great Valley Center.


Central Valley residents don’t have the doctors and medical specialists, per capita, found elsewhere in California, and they are more likely to die of diabetes and heart attacks. They suffer more often from assorted poverty- and pollution-related illnesses than the rest of the state, and are immunized from illness and disease less often. And Kern County is among the worst of the worst in several areas.


Researchers used about two dozen health care indicators, including health insurance coverage, childhood asthma rates and birth weight data to arrive at the conclusions in “The State of the Great Central Valley: Public Health and Access to Care.”


Among the findings:
Kern is third-worst in the 19-county Central Valley in infant mortality rate, with 7.1 deaths per 1,000 births, based on 2004 figures — and faring poorer in that area than three years earlier. It is tied for worst for low birth-weight babies, second-worst for flu-immunization rates, second-worst for chlamydia rates, and fourth-worst in childhood asthma rates.


Kern is worst among the San Joaquin Valley’s eight counties in three-year cancer dearth rates, and dead last — by a shockingly wide margin— in age-adjusted death rates for coronary heart disease.


The study links those health statistics to high rates of poverty, tendency to smoke and binge drinking as compared to the rest of the state.


It’s not all bad news.


Some valleywide trends, such as smoking, immunizations and heart disease are slightly improved from past years. But virtually all lag behind other regions of the state.


What can we do about it? David Hosley, president of the Great Valley Center, said the findings should make Central Valley residents more cognizant of lifestyle choices and how they can impact health.


“People in the Central Valley are making unhealthy choices,” Hosley told the Sacramento Bee. “We’re not eating well, we don’t get enough exercise, we are choosing to use alcohol or drugs to excess.”


But laying the problem at the feet of individuals fails to take broader issues into account. Local governments must work harder to create access to open space, build walkable neighborhoods and retail areas, and reject development plans that fail to account for those and other considerations, such as public transportation.


Healthy living affects almost everything: workplace productivity, success in school, health-care rates, and the ability of a city to attract productive new residents.


With the Central Valley population forecast set at 131 percent growth over the next 40 years, the time to enact positive changes — some of them quite difficult — is upon us.

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posted by editorials on Tuesday, May 20, 2008 at 04:01 PM
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posted by hotandfoggy on May 20, 2008 at 04:07 PM

Last time I looked at a Kern County report card, it also had health stats divided by race/ethnic groups.  The stats for African Americans and Hispanics were even grimmer.


posted by adampayne on May 20, 2008 at 04:42 PM

Normally I don't like to toot my own horn, but I did a blog post on this very Great Valley Center subject May 9. Since only ten views were totaled for the blog post,  I guess the subject of health care in the Central Valley doesn't concern too many people, or they view my commentary as the rantings and ravings of the demented. Anyway, should anyone bother to investigate this pertinent social issue follow the above link and click on the link of the post provided in the first sentence and you can read the report for yourself. I appreciate your editorial commentary, and hope that people will begin to recognize the growing severity of the problem here in the San Joaquin.

 

posted by anglo1 on May 20, 2008 at 05:51 PM

The deaths by heart disease surprises me. The difference in the state and local levels. I'm surprised the filthy air wasn't mentioned as a major contributor to all the major diseases.

posted by AudreyB on May 21, 2008 at 05:59 AM

My children's pediatrician told me 30 years ago to get my kids out of this valley.  He said the valley air is what made them chronically sick with ear and chest infections.  I couldn't afford to do it then and now they're also settled here with their chronically ill kids.

Dr. DeFede was a prophet.  

posted by antiextremism on May 21, 2008 at 08:39 AM

Bad air, poverty, and ignorance are all major contibutors here in the valley.

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