Early Treatment Key to Drug Users Having Healthy Babies
June 27, 2008 by deborah
Filed under Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders (FASD), Prenatal Issues, Womens' Issues
An article published in USA Today reports that drug and alcohol users can have healthy pregnancies if they are treated early in the pregnancy. Early screening for alcohol, drug and tobacco use and abuse was the approach to care at Kaiser Permanente Northern California, where the study was conducted.
CDC Recommends Lead Testing On Some Turf Fields
June 20, 2008 by rosie
Filed under Environmental Issues
This is a press release from CDC
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6/19/2008, 7:37 p.m. EDT By ANGELA DELLI SANTI The Associated Press |
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TRENTON, N.J. (AP) — The federal Centers for Disease Control has recommended that some artificial turf athletic fields be tested for lead.
The CDC recommended testing of any field containing worn or faded turf blades that are made of nylon or nylon-blend fibers. Nylon fields with visible dust should also be tested, the agency said in a health advisory posted online late Wednesday.
The guidelines come two months after New Jersey health officials found unexpectedly high lead levels in turf fibers of three athletic fields. Subsequent tests showed the lead found in the turf can be absorbed by humans.
New Jersey epidemiologist Dr. Eddy Bresnitz said the lead levels were not high enough to cause poisoning in people who play on the fields. But he said the levels could cause more damage in children already exposed to lead.
Additional tests are being done to better understand the absorption of lead from turf products.
The tests done by New Jersey health officials found potentially hazardous lead levels only on worn nylon and nylon-blend athletic fields. The CDC did not recommend testing artificial turf fields made from polyethylene or nylon fields that are not visibly worn.
“As determined by New Jersey Department of Health and Senior Services, limited sampling of additional athletic fields in New Jersey and commercial products indicates that artificial turf made of nylon or nylon/polyethylene blend fibers contains levels of lead that pose a potential public health concern,” the CDC advisory states. “Tests of artificial turf fields made with only polyethylene fibers showed that these fields contained very low levels of lead.”
New Jersey found itself at the forefront of the issue after state health authorities stumbled onto the lead while investigating whether runoff from a scrap-metal operation in Newark had contaminated an adjacent playing field.
Pigment containing lead chromate is used in some surfaces to make the grass green and hold its color in sunlight. But it is not clear how widely the compound is used. The New Jersey Health Department found lead in three nylon fields it tested, but in none of the 10 polyethylene surfaces it examined.
The three fields in New Jersey were voluntarily ripped up and replaced.
The CDC said no cases of elevated blood lead levels in children have been linked to artificial turf.
The artificial turf industry has said its products are safe because the lead used to color the turf is encapsulated within the blades.
State authorities requested more comprehensive testing on a federal level, and the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission agreed.
The agency is looking into the possible health hazards of lead in artificial turf installed at schools, parks and stadiums across the country.
Those results are pending.
The CDC acknowledges that it does not fully understand the potential risks associated with exposure to dust from worn artificial turf.
To minimize the risk of exposure, it suggests that field managers water down fields and use other dust-suppression measures.
For people who play on turf fields, the CDC recommends thoroughly washing hands and showering immediately afterward, turning clothes inside out and washing them separately from other laundry, that athletic shoes be left outside, and that drinking containers be covered and kept in a bag or cooler when not being used.
Suicide Attempts Among Adults With Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders
June 17, 2008 by deborah
Filed under Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders (FASD)
Janet E. Huggins, Ph.D., Therese Grant, Ph.D., Kieran O’Malley, M.B., D.A.B.P.N. & Ann P. Streissguth, Ph.D. from the Fetal Alcohol and Drug Unit, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the University of Washington have published an article on the risks of suicide among persons with Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders (FASD) in the APRIL/MAY/JUNE 2008 (VOLUME 11 – NUMBER 2) edition of Mental Health Aspects of Developmental Disabilities.
People diagnosed with fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD) have neuropsychological deficits that may contribute to increased risk for suicide. This paper describes clinical profiles of eleven individuals with FASD and differentiates six who attempted suicide from five who did not, with regard to risk and protective factors. Attempters were more likely to have mental health disorders, substance abuse disorders, a history of trauma or abuse, financial stress, and unstable social support compared to non-attempters. We discuss ways in which clinicians can reduce risk among individuals with FASD by modifying standard suicide assessment and intervention protocols to accommodate the person’s deficits.
Child Health Scorecard by States Now Available
June 13, 2008 by rosie
Filed under Childhood Issues, Did You Know?, Resources
State-by-State child health scorecard is now available from the Commonwealth Fund. This extensive 74 page report is titled Variations in Child Health System Performance. Click on the Link below and see how your State ranks. Why is Vermont doing so well?
Click on the report below
cmwf-5-08-child-health-scorecard.pdf
7 Easy Ways To Use This Site
June 11, 2008 by rosie
Filed under Did You Know?
1. Subscribe to this site.
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Beintheknownj.org provides information on a broad selection of maternal and child health and public health issues. We hope that you will find much of this information to be of interest, but, knowing you are busy, here are some tips to help you navigate through the site a little more efficiently. Each entry after the title is called a “post”. Some of the posts are long and some are short. Scanning the sub-headings will help you to determine if the post is of value to you and save you lots of time. You’ll see that some words or phrases in each post are typed in pink. These will usually be a link that will take you to another site, pdf form, word document or PowerPoint slide show.
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What is Curanderismo and Can It Harm Children?
June 11, 2008 by deborah
Filed under Childhood Issues, Environmental Issues, Womens' Issues
Curanderismo is folk medicine that is an important and common aspect of Hispanic culture and its use is often associated with spiritual and psychic healing. Several physicians at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey recently published a case study in Pediatric Emergency Care. The article details the health consequences to a 4-year old Mexican child who developed systemic toxicity after being exposed to an isopropyl alcohol and chamomile preparation during a curanderismo ritual. Click on the link below to read the complete article.


