Thursday, April 3, 2008

Florida: Too many kids lack health care

Although a statewide report on children's health released Wednesday found that most children in the state had good health and adequate health care, it also revealed some troubling patterns.

excerpts:

The study showed that one out of 10 children in Florida fail to receive the health care services their parents feel they need. Those children are most likely found in low-income families that have no insurance or rely on Medicaid, the report says.

Nearly one of every three children, ages 10-17 is overweight or obese

Among Florida's high school students, nearly one third reported symptoms of depression for two weeks of more.

Nearly four out of every 25 students studied said they had considered suicide in the past 12 months.

The Chartbook Report mirrors findings of a survey of 2,196 local ninth graders who took the Youth Risk Behavior Survey in area high schools in 2006. More than 14 percent of the teens said they had seriously considered suicide in the past year.

The Chartbook Report also found that the children who had the worst overall health status and sub-optimal health care tended to be in low-income or minority families.

The children who had the greatest difficulty in receiving high-quality care were children with special health care needs - those who have physical, mental or behavioral challenges.

Overall, the Chartbook report found that 25.9 percent of families with children with special health care needs reported financial problems. Additionally, 37.2 percent of those families reported cutting back or stopping work altogether in order to care for the health needs of their child/children with special health care needs.

full article

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