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AJPH NEWS Release
EMBARGOED UNTIL Oct. 3, 2006, 4 PM (ET)
CONTACT: For copies of articles, call Olivia Chang, (202) 777-2511
The articles below will be published online October 3, at 4
p.m. by the American Journal of Public Health under "First
Look" at http://www.ajph.org/first_look.shtml, and will appear
in the November 2006 print issue
of the Journal. "First Look" articles have undergone
peer review, copyediting and approval by authors but have not
yet been printed to paper or posted online by issue. The American
Journal of Public Health is published by the American Public
Health Association, www.apha.org, and is available at www.ajph.org.
To stay up to date on the latest in public health research, sign
up for new Journal content e-mail alerts at http://www.ajph.org/subscriptions/etoc.shtml?ck=nck.
American Journal of Public Health Highlights
· Folic acid may protect against birth defects, but
intake still falls short of goals
· Women and substance abuse: did welfare reform make a
difference?
· Tobacco companies may use smoke and mirrors to appear
to comply with health demands
· Upward social mobility helps lower risk of low birthweight,
but not for black women
Folic acid may protect against birth defects,
but intake still falls short of goals
A national mandate to fortify all U.S. enriched grain products
with folic acid has led to an overall intake of the nutrient,
yet consumption still falls far short of federal targets and varies
greatly among different populations.
The Food and Drug Administration mandated folic acid fortification
of U.S. enriched grain products in 1998 with the goal of reducing
the number of babies born with neural tube defects. Researchers
analyzed food, supplement and total folate intake by age, gender
and race/ethnicity from two National Health and Nutrition Examination
Surveys and found that daily folate consumption increased by 100
micrograms (mcg) since the national fortification requirement.
The proportion of women aged 15-44 consuming greater than 400
mcg/day of folate has increased since fortification, but has not
yet reached the Food and Drug Administration's 50 percent target,
varying by race/ethnicity from 23 percent to 33 percent.
And while adequate folic acid intake helps protect against birth
defects as well as protect against heart disease and colon cancer,
consuming too much of the nutrient can mask the anemia caused
by vitamin B-12 deficiency among the elderly. The study found
that since folic acid fortification of U.S. grains, the percent
of people ages 65 and older consuming over 1,000 mcg/day (the
"tolerable upper intake level") has at least doubled
among whites and black men but still remains under 5 percent for
all groups.
[From: "Population-Level Changes in Folate Intake by Age, Gender and Race/Ethnicity After Folic Acid Fortification." Contact: Karen M. Kuntz, ScD, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Mass., kmk@hsph.harvard.edu.]
Women and substance abuse: did welfare reform make a difference?
Substance abuse is less common among women on welfare than the
condition was 15 years ago, but Temporary Assistance to Needy
Families (TANF) remains an important "portal" to identifying
women who need help kicking an addiction.
Two recent studies examined substance use disorders among low-income women with children, and found that welfare reform seemed to have translated into fewer substance-abusing women receiving TANF aid. TANF recipients who have drug problems are more likely to get treatment than poor women who do not receive such aid. Some types of treatment are much more effective than others.
A study based on annual data from mothers between the ages of 18-49 within the 1990-2001 National Household Survey of Drug Abuse and the 2002 National Survey of Drug Use and Health found that welfare receipt among low-income substance-using mothers declined from 54 percent in 1996 to 38 percent in 2001. The decline was much smaller (37 percent to 31 percent) among poor mothers who did not use illicit substances. And among 2002 survey respondents deemed "in-need" of treatment, welfare recipients were more than twice as likely as non-recipients to receive such services. Welfare receipt has declined among drug-using women. This has created a new challenge for policy-makers and the social service systems, as welfare remains a prominent portal to identify low-income women with substance use disorders, and to both provide and fund drug treatment interventions.
Another study found intensive case management was much more effective than the usual model of care for women on welfare who had drug problems. In that study, women who received intensive case management, which involved long-term support and monitoring, were twice as likely to be drug-free 15 months following the first treatment than those enrolled in more traditional treatment programs.
[From: "Welfare Receipt and Treatment among Substance-Using Mothers: Did Welfare Reform Make a Difference?" Contact: Harold A. Pollack, PhD, University of Chicago, haroldp@uchicago.edu and "A Randomized Field Trial Examining the Effectiveness of Intensive Case Management for Substance Dependent Women Receiving Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF)." Contact: Jon Morgenstern, PhD, CASA, New York, N.Y., jmorgenstern@casacolumbia.org.]
Tobacco companies may use smoke and mirrors to appear to
comply with health demands
When it comes to warnings about the dangers of cigarette smoking,
tobacco companies can be adept at appearing to be helpful while
not truly complying with public demand. Researchers reviewed internal
tobacco industry documents and related materials to construct
a case history of how Philip Morris responded to a shareholder
campaign requiring health warnings on cigarettes sold worldwide.
They found that Philip Morris resisted for 11 years, then unilaterally
reversed direction, proposing its own labeling initiative. While
activists celebrated, the company's president detailed privately
how Philip Morris would yield little and benefit disproportionately.
By portraying the industry as preying on the poor and uneducated,
advocates helped divide the company from financial and political
allies. When Philip Morris "gave in" to their demands,
it exchanged negative publicity for positive public relations
and political credibility.
In the words of the study's authors, "Negotiating with the tobacco industry can enhance its legitimacy and facilitate its ability to market deadly cigarettes without corresponding benefits to public health."
[From: "Making Big Tobacco Give In: You Lose, They Win."
Contact:
Nathaniel Wander, PhD, University of California San Francisco,
nathaniel.wander@ucsf.edu, or Ruth Malone, RN, PhD, ruth.malone@ucsf.edu,
Janet Basu, UCSF Public Information, janet.basu@ucsf.edu 415-476-2557]
Upward social mobility helps lower risk of low birthweight,
but not for black women
Upward mobility can help white women who start out poor in life
reduce their chance of having a low birthweight baby by up to
nearly 50 percent, yet it may do very little to help similarly
situated black women. A new study involving more than 1,800 births
found that among white women who grew up in poor households, the
more their family income increased over time, the less likely
they were to give birth to a low birthweight baby. But the same
did not hold true for black women. This discrepancy could not
be attributable to lifestyle factors such as smoking, drinking
or lack of prenatal care.
"Upward mobility is likely to be a qualitatively different experience for black women than white women," notes lead study author Cynthia G. Colen, Ph.D. "Even while their financial situations are improving, black women face obstacles that white women do not - primarily because of racial discrimination. For example, residential segregation makes it more difficult for upwardly mobile black families to secure housing in safe, healthy neighborhoods. Such challenges can create additional stress for black women and ultimately affect the health of their infants."
One factor did lower black women's risk of having a low birthweight baby: the presence of a grandmother in the household, which reduced the overall risk of low birthweight by 53 percent.
"These results suggest that for African-Americans the presence of certain key family members has an independent impact on birthweight above and beyond the provision of financial resources," the study authors write.
However, as black women move up the socioeconomic ladder, they may be less likely to rely on their own mothers for support and assistance with childrearing responsibilities. Forty-seven percent of births to chronically poor black women occurred in households with a co-residential grandmother; for upwardly mobile black women that figure was only 18 percent.
[From: "Upward Maternal Socioeconomic Mobility and Black-White Disparities in Infant Birthweight." Contact: Cynthia G. Colen, Ph.D., Robert Wood Johnson Health & Society Scholar, Columbia University, cc2557@columbia.edu. ]
The American Journal of Public Health is the monthly journal of the American Public Health Association (APHA), the oldest organization of public health professionals in the world. APHA is a leading publisher of public health-related books and periodicals promoting high scientific standards, action programs and policy for good health. More information is available at www.apha.org.
Complimentary online access to the journal is available to credentialed members of the media. Address inquires to Olivia Chang at APHA, 202-777-2511, or via e-mail, olivia.chang@apha.org. A single print issue of the Journal is available for $20 and a single article is available for $10 from the Journal's Subscriptions department. If you are not a member of the American Public Health Association or a Journal subscriber and wish to order or renew any type of subscription, purchase single issue publications or articles, please visit http://www.ajph.org/subscriptions. If you would like to reach customer service directly, please call (202) 777-2516 or e-mail ajph.subscriptions@apha.org.
To stay up to date on the latest in public health research,
sign up for new content e-mail alerts at http://www.ajph.org/subscriptions/etoc.shtml?ck=nck.
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