New Jersey Public Health Association Spring 2015 Issue Editor’s Note By Nadine Etienne, MPH Happy Spring and Good Health! One of the health observances for April is Minority Health Month which acknowledges that there is still an overwhelming health disparity between racial groups. The African American, Hispanic and other minority communities experience health disparities due to personal beliefs against seeking health care options, language barriers and inadequate access to health programs. The minority population is associated with lower socioeconomic status and urban communities. These neighborhoods lack access to fresh produce and often promote affordable, but unhealthy foods. Health Literacy is also another barrier within the minority population in which communication with health providers often brings challenges when assistance is sought. The CDC in collaboration with the Department of Health & Human Services outlined six recommendations for health equity based on the 1985 Heckler Report. One of the recommendations states, ‘The Department should ensure that its materials, programs, and technical assistance for patient education are responsive to minority population needs, especially those provided in specific health care service settings such as medical, community-based, school and worksite locations’ (CDC, March 2015). The break of warm weather is a perfect opportunity to target health promotion to these populations and there has been a shift in incorporating outreach strategies such as hiring members of the communities and providing health materials in various languages. Enjoy the upcoming warm weather! Reference: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, March 2015. April is National Minority Health Month! [web article]. Retrieved from: http://www.cdc.gov/minorityhealth/observances/MH.html New Jersey Public Health Association Spring Monthly Health Observances APRIL Month-long observances Alcohol Awareness Month Autism Awareness Month Facial Protection Month Foot Health Awareness Month Humor Month March for Babies Minority Health Month Occupational Therapy Month Sexually Transmitted Infections Awareness Month Sports Eye Safety Month Women’s Eye Health and Safety Month Week-long observances 5–11 Public Health Week 12–18 Healthcare Volunteer Week 19–25 Neurodiagnostic Week Recognition days | events 7 Health Day 9 Alcohol Screening Day 11 Walk for Epilepsy 15 Healthcare Decisions Day 16 Voice Day 17 Hemophilia Day 17–19 Youth Service Day 29 Noise Awareness Day MAY Month-long observances Arthritis Awareness Month Arthritis Walk Better Hearing and Speech Month Better Sleep Month Bike Month Critical Care Awareness and Recognition Month Employee Health and Fitness Month Healthy Vision Month Hepatitis Awareness Month High Blood Pressure Education Month Huntington’s Disease Awareness Month Liver Awareness Month Lupus Awareness Month MAY (continued) Melanoma / Skin Cancer Detection and Prevention Mental Health Month Motorcycle Safety and Awareness Month Neurofibromatosis Awareness Month Older Americans Month Osteoporosis Month Stroke Awareness Month Teen Pregnancy Prevention Month Trauma Awareness Month Ultraviolet Awareness Month Week-long observances 1–18 Run A Mile Days 4–10 Anxiety and Depression Awareness 10–16 Food Allergy Awareness Week 10–16 Women’s Health Week 11–17 Stuttering Awareness Week 31–6/6 Community Health Improvement Week Recognition days | events 4 Melanoma Monday 7 Children’s Mental Health Awareness 12 Fibromyalgia Awareness Day 12 ME / CFS Awareness Day 20 Autoimmune Arthritis Day 25 Missing Children’s Day 27 Senior Health and Fitness Day JUNE Month-long observances Aphasia Awareness Month Cataract Awareness Month Hernia Awareness Month Men’s Health Month Migraine and Headache Awareness Month Scleroderma Awareness Month Week-long observances 1–7 Sun Safety Week 15–19 Healthcare Risk Management Week 15–21 Men’s Health Week Recognition days | events 7 Cancer Survivors Day New Jersey Public Health Association E-cigarettes: A Public Health Challenge By Mary E. O’Dowd, MPH, Commissioner New Jersey Department of Health As health advocates, we have seen tremendous progress in reducing smoking in our state and nation. However, e-cigarettes pose a new public health challenge. Ecigarettes have been promoted as a substitute to traditional cigarettes for smokers looking to quit. While many believe that e-cigarettes are a safer alternative than conventional smoking, this has not been scientifically proven. Of particular concern is that nationally the use of e-cigarettes is increasing among our youth. The same generation who would have most benefited from the success in reducing traditional smoking in our society are the targets for this new nicotine product. More than a quarter of a million youth who had never smoked a cigarette used e-cigarettes in 2013, according to a CDC study published in the journal Nicotine and Tobacco Research. This number reflects a three-fold increase, from about 79,000 in 2011, to more than 263,000 in 2013. E-cigarettes are also more often marketed towards and appealing to children and adolescents. The same CDC study, which surveys middle and high school students, shows that youth who had never smoked conventional cigarettes but who used e-cigarettes were almost twice as likely to have intentions to smoke conventional cigarettes as those who had never used e-cigarettes. Among non-smoking youth who had ever used e-cigarettes, 43.9 percent said they have intentions to smoke conventional cigarettes within the next year, compared with 21.5 percent of those who had never used e-cigarettes. Flavoring of e-cigarettes may increase the appeal to youth. Enticing flavors of electronic cigarettes include cherry, chocolate, gummy bear and bubble gum. In New Jersey, 6.1 percent of high school students reported being current users of e-cigarettes in 2012. Nationally, that number is larger with 10 percent of high school students reporting using e-cigarettes. As we see more young adults using e-cigarettes, the impact of this unregulated product on the health of our youth is concerning. The FDA conducted a lab analysis of e-cigarette samples and found that at least half of the brands contain carcinogens and toxic chemicals. In addition to chemicals, e-cigarettes deliver nicotine, a highly addictive chemical, increasing the likelihood of lifelong use of tobacco products. The rise in e-cigarette use can hurt more than just the user. In 2014, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) released a study noting a steady and rapid increase in the number of calls to poison controls centers nationwide about e-cigarettes and ingestions of liquid nicotine. The analysis compared total monthly poison center calls involving e-cigarettes and conventional cigarettes, and found the proportion of e-cigarette calls jumped from 0.3 percent in September 2010 to 41.7 percent in February 2014. More than half the calls were about children less than 5 years of age, the most vulnerable to the toxic effects of nicotine. New Jersey Public Health Association E-cigarettes: A Public Health Challenge (continued) In New Jersey calls to the New Jersey Poison Information and Education System (NJPIES) have also risen with nine calls in 2011 to 45 calls related to e-cigarettes or liquid nicotine. New Jersey is working to limit the impact e-cigarettes have on our youth. The Department through newspaper articles, letters to caregivers, and alerts is highlighting the potentially deadly toxic properties of nicotine, an active ingredient used at varying levels in e-cigarette liquids, which are unregulated products sold over the counter in convenience stores. The Department is asking local health departments to help distribute a warning advisory online and in the course of their routine inspections of restaurants, bars and other retail food establishments. The goal of the Department’s liquid nicotine poison prevention efforts is to protect the lives of children and prevent tragic and avoidable harm. New Jersey has led the nation as the first state to include e-cigarettes as a tobacco product in its Smoke Free Air Act, which was amended in 2010 to ban the use of e-cigarettes in public places and workplaces and ban e-cigarette sales to people 19 years and younger. The FDA has announced plans to regulate e-cigarettes but that will take time and our children cannot wait. The Department urges the state’s healthcare providers to talk to patients about e-cigarettes. Parents and guardians need to be aware that these products are being marketed to their children. Working together, we can prevent New Jersey’s youth from entering into a life -long nicotine addiction. New Jersey Public Health Association Coaching Communities to Build a Culture of Health By Toni Lewis, MPH, HO, Community Coach, County Health Rankings and Roadmaps a Program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation The Roadmaps to Health Coaching Program provides local leaders with direct support from community coaches to strengthen their capacity to advance efforts to build a Culture of Health in their communities. This Coaching Program is part of County Health Rankings & Roadmaps, a collaboration between the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the University of Wisconsin Population Health Institute. The Rankings are a revealing snapshot of how place matters to health. The Roadmaps to Health Action Center, an online platform with access to coaches, provides practical help for communities working collectively to improve their health. Coaches bring expertise from a variety of disciplines to support leaders’ use of Action Center tools and to offer guidance on advancing health. The Roadmaps to Health Coaching Program offers community leaders the opportunity to: Strengthen and/or rejuvenate multi-sector partnerships so they are better poised to advance work that builds a Culture of Health; Enhance community capacity in at least one area in the Poised for Progress tool (a self-assessment of the critical skills necessary to create health in communities); Build direction, alignment, and commitment to implement and sustain specific strategies to enhance health outcomes; and Connect with other community leaders or national experts who are building a Culture of Health. Take Action Cycle Coaches customize their guidance for each community based on their assets and goals, meeting communities wherever they are in the Take Action Cycle. By strengthening community leaders’ skills and capacity to work together, strategize, and implement actions to improve health, communities are better poised to advance health now and in the future. To contact a community coach and learn more about how this resource may help your community, please complete the simple form found at www.countyhealthrankings.org/contact New Jersey Public Health Association When Public Health Goes to Court By Gwyneth M. Eliasson, JD, MPH On February 5, 2015, the Network for Public Health Law (NPHL) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Public Health Law Program (PHLP) presented the first Webinar of the three-part series on “Public Health and the Judiciary.” The first session started with an overview of the federal and state court systems (including administrative courts), then offered a judge’s perspective on infectious disease quarantine requests, followed by the complexities of tribal jurisdiction in domestic violence crimes, and concluded with an introduction to court watch programs. Suggested online resources included PHLP’s “Public Health Law 101,” a nine-topic foundational course available at http:// www.cdc.gov/phlp/publications/phl_101.html On March 5, 2015, the second Webinar presented the arguments for – and against – using courts to create public policy, acknowledging limitations in courts’ role; reviewed litigation on compulsory vaccines, tobacco-related injuries, and the Affordable Care Act; discussed the expanding scope of public health law; and ended with an overview of civil and criminal public health cases. Recommended online resources included PHLP’s “Public Health Law Bench Books” for 18 states (e.g., Pennsylvania), downloadable at http://www.cdc.gov/phlp/ publications/type/benchbooks.html On April 2, 2015, the final Webinar focused on the court system’s role in public health emergencies. Featured topics included an overview of courts’ emergency powers, judges’ approaches to quarantine and isolation hearings, and issuing orders in public health emergencies. To download the slides and/or view the recording of the February 5th Webinar: www.networkforphl.org/webinars/2015/02/05/533/when_public_health_goes_to_court_judi cial_structure_and_functions To download the slides and/or listen to and watch the playback of the March 5th Webinar: www.networkforphl.org/webinars/2015/02/26/547/when_public_health_goes_to_court_curr ent_public_health_court_cases New Jersey Public Health Association Career Corner: Highlighting Resources for Job Seekers Gwyneth M. Eliasson, JD, MPH Idealist Careers’ Feb. 12th Webinar on writing a LinkedIn profile http:// idealistcareers.org/not-sure-what-to-do-with-your-linkedin-profile-start-here/ From PBS’ Next Avenue: “The 24 Best Resume Keywords for Your Job Search” www.nextavenue.org/article/2015-02/24-best-resume-keywords-your-job-search Idealist Careers on “3 steps to creating a successful job search strategy” http://idealistcareers.org/3-steps-to-creating-a-job-search-strategy-that-will-leadto-success/ New Jersey Public Health Association #MoreThan4 - Pediatric Cancer Funding Takes to Social Media By Shweta Gohil, MPH(c), Rutgers School of Public Health Every September, Childhood Cancer Awareness Month raises awareness of a diagnosis affecting 13,500 children per year, a leading cause of pediatric death from disease. Annually, however, the National Cancer Institute (NCI) spends less than 4% of its budget on childhood cancer research. Perhaps social media will be the next tool in the fight against pediatric cancer. During the week of March 16th, the NCI Selfie Campaign for Kids with Cancer launched. This Selfie Campaign continued the war against cancer pioneered by Mary Lasker, through the American Cancer Society, and Dr. Sidney Farber, founder of the Cancer Center that eventually became the DanaFarber Cancer Institute. Ms. Lasker realized that the war against cancer required both scientific research at hospitals (done by Dr. Farber and others across the country) and personal touches uniting the general public. The Selfie Campaign encouraged those fighting pediatric cancer, those who have lost someone, survivors, and all other supporters to post a selfie featuring the sign: “NCI 4% Not Enough For Childhood Cancer #MoreThan4”. The Campaign trended on Facebook with selfies of toddlers in treatment and grieving siblings as well as selfies from organizations that raise funds for cancer research. This advocacy campaign might have social media success similar to last year’s “Ice Bucket Challenge,” which raised $115 million for ALS research. In 1971, President Richard Nixon declared a war against cancer and signed the National Cancer Act, strengthening the NCI. Hopefully, this Selfie Campaign for Kids with Cancer will be more than another awareness initiative – but instead, the impetus for a permanent shift in NCI policy and allocation of cancer research funding. References: 1) ALS Association: http://www.alsa.org/fight-als/ice-bucket-challenge.html 2) Medscape slideshow on war on cancer (log in required): http://www.medscape.com/features/ slideshow/war-on-cancer 3) Coalition Against Childhood Cancer (CAC2): http://cac2.org/ 4) NCI Selfie Campaign for Kids with Cancer Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/events/1376034469386150/ 5) National Library of Medicine Profile in Science: The Mary Lasker Papers - Cancer Wars: http://profiles.nlm.nih.gov/ps/retrieve/Narrative/TL/p-nid/201 6) The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer by Siddhartha Mukherjee (2010) New Jersey Public Health Association STD’s is still a public health threat By Nadine Etienne, MPH Although it seems as though the topic of STD’s has been almost silenced, the number of new infections is still high in NJ. During the height of HIV’s media attention, condom use was stressed and the implementation of 2008 legislation to test pregnant women for HIV, decreased perinatal transmission of the disease. However one of the major STD’s, Gonorrhea, has increased in the last 6 years. The number of reported cases by County, Gender and Age for Gonorrhea in 2007 was 3,014 (State of NJ Department of Health, 2007). In 2013 the same statistical population has risen to more than double to 7,016 (State of NJ Department of Health, 2013). Essex County has remained the municipality with the highest number of cases. For last year’s stats, Essex County women, aged 15-19, held the highest number in infections of 292, while the highest number of infected Essex County males was 218 in the 20-24 age group. Based on these numbers it is safe to assume that teenage girls are having sexual relations with older men. April is Sexually Transmitted Infections Awareness Month and May is Teen Pregnancy Prevention Month. With the high number of Gonorrheal Infections reported, condom use is not being practiced by teen girls and the potential for pregnancy is a heightened risk. NJ PREP is a program that aids in STD and pregnancy prevention. Partnership for Maternal & Child Health states, ‘NJ PREP helps communities with ongoing health education efforts by enabling teens to make safer and healthier decisions about their futures, (Partnership for Maternal & Child Health of Northern New Jersey, 2015). A large amount of health disparities exist in Essex County and providing prevention programs that targets the specific population of teenagers can decrease the future statistics of Gonorrhea for young ladies. References: Department of Health, State of New Jersey, 2007. Sexually Transmitted Disease program: Reported Cases in New Jersey for 2007 Broken Down By County, Gender, and Age Group. Retrieved from: http://www.state.nj.us/health/std/stdstats/stdstats2007/gonorrhea_cases2007.pdf Department of Health, State of New Jersey, 2013. Sexually Transmitted Disease program: Reported Cases in New Jersey for 2013 Broken Down By County, Gender, and Age Group. Retrieved from: http://www.nj.gov/health/std/stdstats/stdstats2013/gonorrhea_county_gender_agegroup.pdf Partnership for Maternal & Child Health of Northern New Jersey, 2015. NJ PREP. Retrieved from: http://partnershipmch.org/programs/njprep/ New Jersey Public Health Association Do you have news and views to share? You are invited to submit articles for our Summer 2015 quarterly newsletter by June 19th! As a public health professional much of your career will be reporting and writing about a variety of health topics, whether it is an abstract, peer reviewed article, OpEd article for a local newspaper, media release, policy brief, or other health communication materials. The NJPHA newsletter offers you an opportunity to begin honing your skills and writing about public health topics. We welcome submissions on ANY topic related to public health. Perhaps you would consider submitting an article about any of the following: •An internship or practicum experience •Work with a public health program or research project •Public health events or news at your school •Thoughts on a policy with public health implications •Commentary on a public health issue •Public health career advice •Local, state, or national public health events, projects or advocacy efforts •Any other news of public health importance and/or importance to public health professionals Please include the following with your submission: • Name • Academic institution (institution name, department, degree program) • Title of article • A head shot or picture of yourself or others engaging in public health work Also, please follow these guidelines: • 12-point, Times New Roman font • No more than 300 words • Single spaced • List of references (if applicable) Please email your article and any questions to Gwyneth, gme10467@gmail.com or Nadine, nadine.etienne@hotmail.com
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