Center in the News

Related Project
Featured Staff
Year
Sierra Sun Times

Covered California Joins Behavioral Health Leaders to Promote Enrollment and Improve Access to Address Increased Need for Mental Health Care

A new report from the California Health Interview Survey, the nation’s largest state health survey, shows significant increases in the number of adults who sought behavioral health care and details the impact it has had on their lives.

California Health Interview Survey (CHIS), Mental Health Program
Santa Barbara Independent

New opportunity begins today for 400,000 Californians to enroll in more affordable health insurance

The UCLA Center for Health Policy Research estimates that 615,000 Californians are caught in the "family glitch." Of those, 391,000 people — who previously were not eligible for federal subsidies because a family member had an offer of employersponsored coverage — will now be eligible for financial help through Covered California.

Harvard Political Review

Immigrants Assimilation Model: Rethinking the Role of the Government and Society

In a study conducted by the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research, researchers found that two-thirds of the immigrant Latino and Asian survey participants faced discrimination in the workplace due to skin color or accent.

RIGHTS Study
The Oaklandside

Vaccination Fatigue?' Fewer people in Alameda County are getting flu shots

Dr. Vickie Mays, a health policy and management professor at UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, said vaccine education efforts aimed at communities of color don’t always adequately take into consideration a community’s beliefs, culture, or understanding of health.

Mental Health Program
Vickie Mays
UCLA Newsroom

Steve Wallace posthumously honored by Journal of Aging and Health

Two of Wallace’s mentees and colleagues, Lourdes Guerrero and Jacqueline Torres, wrote an introduction about his impact as a trailblazing researcher for disparaged populations, a policy maker to improve public health, and a mentor and warm presence.

Public Policy Institute of California

Investing in Schools to Address COVID 19's Toll on Youth Mental Health

About one-third of California adolescents age 12–17 experienced serious psychological distress between 2019 and 2021, according to the California Health Interview Survey.

California Health Interview Survey (CHIS)
Inquirer

Study Finds Fil-Ams to be the most obese Asian subgroup

According to BMC Public Health, the prevalence of obesity among Asian Americans is especially high among Asian Americans who live in California. In a 2013-2014 California Health Interview Survey, researchers looked at factors such as age, sex, family income, marital status, education level, physical activity, and fast food consumption.

California Health Interview Survey (CHIS)
Ventura County Star

Changes open door to health insurance subsidies for working families in Ventura County

The “glitch” is gone. Working Ventura County families who previously couldn’t get health insurance subsidies can now receive the aid to shrink their premiums. In Ventura County, about 39,000 people, or about 5% of the population, were uninsured in 2021, according to the California Health Interview Survey.

California Health Interview Survey (CHIS)
LA Times

We'll end up on the streets': L.A. caregivers for elderly, disabled push for higher pay

In general, the cost of keeping someone at home with a program like IHSS, is far less than if we end up in institutional care."

Long Term Services and Supports (LTSS), Health Equity Program
Kathryn G. Kietzman
Asam News

Which Asian American subgroup is more likely to be obese?

"For the first time, there are two studies on obesity that differentiates between Asian American subgroups."

California Health Interview Survey (CHIS)