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American Public Health Association
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For Immediate Release
Contact: For copies of articles, call Patricia Warin, (202) 777-2511 or e-mail patricia.warin@apha.org.

News from the December 2008 American Journal of Public Health

American Journal of Public Health Highlights:

 

  • Steroid use may be connected to increased violence in U.S. young adult males
  • Another reason to quit: Smoking may be linked to higher cognitive decline
  • Ex-prisoners experience higher mortality rate than general population
  • Ethnic disparities in access to care remain in post-Apartheid South Africa

 

 

Steroid use may be connected to increased violence in U.S. young adult males

 

Young male adults who used anabolic-androgenic steroids reported greater involvement in violent behaviors, such as shooting or stabbing someone, according to a new study.

 

In a nationally representative sample of 6,283 young adult U.S. males, researchers examined the relationship between anabolic-androgenic steroid use and involvement in different types of violent behavior. Anabolic-androgenic steroids are muscle-building synthetic compounds closely related to make sex hormones and legally available only by prescription. The study controlled for the effects of key demographic variables, previous violent behavior, and other drug use. Researchers concluded that the use of anabolic-androgenic steroids is related to heightened levels of violent behaviors.  

 

The study’s authors stated, “the current research suggests that the media attention and public concern surrounding anabolic-androgenic steroid use may be justified given its association with violence among males in the United States.”

 

[From: “Anabolic-Androgenic Steroid Use and Involvement in Violent Behavior in a Nationally Representative Sample of Young Adult Males in the United States” Contact: Kevin M. Beaver, PhD, College of Criminology and Social Justice, Florida State University, kbeaver@fsu.edu]. 

 

 

 

 

Another reason to quit: Smoking may be linked to a higher cognitive decline

 

When compared to non-smokers, researchers found that smokers scored lower in global cognitive function, speed, and flexibility at middle age.

 

The sample consisted of 1,964 men and women in the Netherlands aged 43 to 70 years. Researchers examined them for cognitive function twice, at the baseline and five years later. Researchers found at the baseline smokers scored lower than never smokers in global cognitive function, speed, and flexibility; at the five-year follow-up, decline among smokers was 1.9 times greater for memory function, 2.4 times greater for cognitive flexibility, and 1.7 times greater for global cognitive function than among never smokers.

 

“Our results indicate that giving up smoking at any age may prevent further smoking-induced cognitive decline,” the study’s authors declared. “The results stress the need for stop-smoking interventions in order to postpone cognitive decline among middle-aged persons.”

 

[From: “Smoking and Cognitive Decline Among Middle-Aged Men and Women: The Doetinchem Cohort Study” Contact: W.M. Monique Verschuren, PhD, Centre for Prevention and Health Services Research, National Institute for Public Health and Environment, The Netherlands, wmm.verschuren@rivm.nl].  

 

 

Ex-prisoners experience higher mortality rate than general population

 

Underscoring their medical vulnerability and the need to improve correctional and community preventive health services, a new study found that ex-prisoners are at greater mortality risk than the general population.

 

Using North Carolina prison records with state death records from 1980 to 2005, researchers studied a total of 168,001 black and white male former prisoners aged 20 to 69 years. They discovered that deaths from homicide, accidents, substance abuse, HIV, liver disease, and liver cancer were greater than would have been expected of the general population. In addition, deaths from cardiovascular disease, lung cancer, respiratory diseases, and diabetes were at least 30 percent greater than expected for white ex-prisoners, but less than expected for black ex-prisoners.

 

Researchers stated, “The public health implications of these findings for the United States is troubling given the large size of the U.S. ex-prisoner population, the heavy burden of disease among prisoners, and the legal sanctions and social stigma that diminish access to resources after release from prison.”

 

[From: “All-Cause and Cause-Specific Mortality Among Men Released From State Prison, 1980-2005” Contact, David L. Rosen, PhD, Department of Epidemiology, UNC School of Public Health, drosen@med.unc.edu].

 

Ethnic disparities in access to care remain in post-Apartheid South Africa

 

Fourteen years after the end of apartheid, “blacks” and those of mixed race in South Africa are still underserved and disadvantaged compared with their white and Asian counterparts, especially regarding health care, researchers report.

 

Researchers examined ethnic disparities in obtaining medical care among the four major ethnic groups—blacks, whites, “coloreds” (those of mixed race), and Asians—in post-Apartheid South Africa. A total of 40.8 percent of blacks and 22.9 percent of coloreds reported going without medical care at some point in the past year, compared with 10.9 percent of whites and 6.9 percent of Asians.

 

“Although there have been advances in the equalizing of services, there has also been a deterioration of the public health system. With the proliferation of HIV/AIDS in South Africa, that system is overburdened and unable to care for those most in need,” the study’s authors claimed.  

 

[From: “Ethnic Disparities in Access to Care in Post-Apartheid South Africa” Contact: Zeida R. Kon, MPH, Department of Health Management and Policy, University of North Texas Health Science Center, zrojas@hsc.unt.edu].

 

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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 books and periodicals promoting sound scientific standards, action programs and public policy to enhance health. More information is available at www.apha.org.

 

Complimentary online access to the journal is available to credentialed members of the media.  Address inquiries to Patricia Warin at APHA, (202) 777-2511, or via e-mail, patricia.warin@apha.org. A single print issue of the Journal is available for $25 from the Journal’s Subscriptions department at http://www.ajph.org/subscriptions. If you are not a member of the press, a member of APHA or a subscriber, online single issue access is $22 and online single article access is $10 at http://www.ajph.org. If you would like to order or renew a subscription, visit http://www.ajpj.org/subscriptions, or for direct customer service, call 202-777-2516 or email ajph.subscriptions@apha.org.

 

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