World Immunization Week: April 24-30, 2018

Immunization saves millions of lives and is widely recognized as one of the world’s most successful and cost-effective health interventions. Yet, there are more than 19 million unvaccinated or under-vaccinated children in the world, putting them at serious risk of these potentially fatal diseases. Of these children, 1 out of 10 never receive any vaccinations, and most likely have never been seen by the health system.

World Immunization Week – celebrated in the last week of April – aims to highlight the collective action needed to ensure that every person is protected from vaccine-preventable diseases. Immunization prevents illness, disability and death from vaccine-preventable diseases including cervical cancer, diphtheria, hepatitis B, measles, mumps, pertussis (whooping cough), pneumonia, polio, rotavirus diarrhea, rubella, and tetanus.  For example, the measles vaccination has resulted in an 84% drop in measles deaths between 2000 and 2016 worldwide. Additionally, polio cases have decreased by over 99% since 1988.  Today, only three countries (Afghanistan, Nigeria and Pakistan) remain polio-endemic, down from more than 125 in 1988.

When people ensure that their families and communities are protected with vaccines, we are all protected together.

Visit our immunization pages to find out what vaccines are offered at your local health department: children, adults and travel.

To learn more about World Immunization Week, visit the World Health Organization website.

Posted in Immunizations, News |

National Minority Health Month 2018

 

The old saying goes, “two heads are better than one.” The idea behind this proverb is that it’s helpful to work with others when tackling a problem or working to reach a goal. In public health, individuals and organizations have long used this approach when it comes to addressing health equity. During National Minority Health Month 2018 in April, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) at the Office of Minority Health (OMH) are drawing attention to impactful public and private sector collaborations that advance health equity and help improve the health of the nation. One of the reasons why teamwork can be more effective in addressing health disparities is because our health is influenced by many factors. The places where people are born, grow, live, work, play, learn, and age all impact health. By collaborating across and within sectors such as health, education, justice, housing, transportation, nutrition, environmental health and employment, we can improve living conditions in communities and help individuals live longer and healthier lives. This April, please join Gwinnett, Newton, and Rockdale County Health Departments and the HHS OMH in learning more about organizations across the country who are creating impactful partnerships.

Helpful Links

Posted in Health, News |

National Public Health Week 2018

Contributed by National Public Health Week: An Initiative of the American Public Health Association

Everyone deserves to live a long and healthy life in a safe environment. To make this happen, we must tackle the causes of poor health and disease risk among individuals and within our communities. Where we live, work, worship and play impacts each of use and can determine our health and how long we live. In the workplace, let’s partner across public and private sectors to make sure decisions are made with the public’s health in mind. Within our communities, let’s start new conversations with our neighbors and be advocates for positive change. Working together, we can build healthier communities and, eventually, the healthiest nation. But we need your help to get there.

During each day of National Public Health Week, we will focus on one public health topic. We believe these topic areas are critical to our future success in creating the healthiest nation.

DAILY THEMES

Monday, April 2: Behavioral Health

Advocate for and promote well-being
Focus on and advocate for improved access to mental and behavioral health services. Use education and training to de-stigmatize mental health diagnoses and encourage people experiencing mental illness to seek treatment. Coverage for mental health services must be on par with physical health services in all health insurance coverage.

Tuesday, April 3: Communicable Diseases

Learn about ways to prevent disease transmission
Wash your hands. Know your HIV status. Call on employers to support and provide sick leave so sick workers can care for themselves and avoid spreading disease to others. Support comprehensive sexual health education in schools, which can reduce rates of sexually transmitted disease (as well as teen pregnancy). Keep yourself and your families immunized against vaccine-preventable diseases — and get your flu shot!

Wednesday, April 4: Environmental Health

Help to protect and maintain a healthy planet
Reduce our collective carbon emissions footprint. Transition to renewable energies. Protect our natural resources and use evidence-based policy to protect our air, water and food. Support environmental health efforts that monitor our communities for risks and develop health-promoting interventions. Call for transportation planning that promotes walking, biking and public transit — it not only reduces climate-related emissions, but helps us all stay physically active.

Thursday, April 5: Injury and Violence Prevention

Learn about the effects of injury and violence on health
Increase funding to programs that reduce and prevent community violence. Advocate for occupational health and safety standards that keep workers safe on the job. Support policies that save those struggling with addiction from a fatal drug overdose. Many injuries are preventable with the appropriate education, policy and safety measures.

Friday, April 6: Ensuring the Right to Health

Advocate for everyone’s right to a healthy life
Everyone deserves an opportunity to live a life free from preventable disease and disability. The places where we live, learn, work, worship and play should promote our health, not threaten it. That’s why creating the healthiest nation requires a dogged focus on achieving health equity for all.

Join us in observing NPHW 2018 and become part of a growing movement to create the healthiest nation in one generation. During the week, we will celebrate the power of prevention, advocate for healthy and fair policies, share strategies for successful partnerships and champion the role of a strong public health system.

Copyright American Public Health Association. To see more, visit  http://www.nphw.org/

Posted in Health, News |

STD AWARENESS MONTH

April is STD Awareness Month, an annual observance to raise public awareness about the impact of sexually transmitted diseases (STD) on the lives of Americans and the importance of individuals discussing sexual health with their health care providers and their partners. STDs are a major public health issue in the United States.

CDC estimates that there are approximately 20 million new cases of STDs in the U.S. each year.  Almost half of those cases are among young people ages 15 to 24. Many of those who are infected don’t know it as many STDs do not have any symptoms.

The power to protect your health is in your own hands. Do your homework – know the risks, symptoms, and the steps you can take to protect yourself from STDs.

Talk to your healthcare provider about what you can do – and how you can work together – to be proactive in safeguarding your sexual health. Your health matters, and it’s up to you to take control:

  • Prepare: to answer your healthcare provider’s questions about sex honestly.
  • Get tested: many STDs are curable, and all are treatable.
  • Get treated: protect yourself from long-term, irreversible damage to your health by starting treatment immediately.
  • Know: the benefits of expedited partner therapy (EPT)[1 MB] – your provider may be able to give you medicine or a prescription for your partner – even without seeing them first.
  • Get retested: it’s common to get some STDs more than once, so getting retested in 3 months is important, even if you and your partner took medicine.
  • Communicate, communicate, communicate – with your sexual partner and your healthcare provider.

 

The only way to know for sure if you have an STD is to get tested. Your local health department offers low-cost, confidential STD testing and treatment.  Learn more by visiting our STD Testing and Treatment page.

CDC’s STD Awareness Month website is filled with resources for both healthcare providers and individuals who are at risk or may be impacted by STDs. You can also join the conversation on Twitter and Facebook by using #STDMonth18 and #TreatMeRight.

Posted in News, Sexually Transmitted Disease |

What You Might Not Realize About The Benefits Of Hand-Washing

  MAR 6, 2018

OK, so maybe you’re one of those people who don’t wash their hands even after going to the bathroom because your dad never did and he never got sick.

Or you think a three-second hand scrub is more than enough.

Or you squirt on some hand-sanitizer and figure you’ve done your duty.

I have some news for you.

There’s a new study out on norovirus and the role hand-washing can play in stopping an outbreak.

To sum it up: Wash up!

Norovirus is responsible for roughly 1 in 5 cases worldwide of acute gastroenteritis.The symptoms are pretty horrible: nausea, vomiting and diarrhea. And it’s very, very, very contagious. It takes only one particle to infect a human, compared to roughly 50 to 100 particles of flu virus.

In countries with good health-care systems, a norovirus victim will have about three days of misery but likely recover. But for young children and the elderly, especially in developing countries, the prognosis can be grim. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that 50,000 children a year, under age 5, die from norovirus, mainly in lower-income countries.

The virus is particularly effective at finding victims in crowded places: hospitals, schools … and cruise ships, where everybody is living, eating and sharing activities in the same spaces.

Researcher Sherry Towers became curious about norovirus after contracting a case herself. She believes she got it by using a bathroom in which someone had … barfed. She thought the facility had been adequately cleaned. (Only apparently not.)

Towers, a professor at the Simon A. Levin Mathematical, Computational and Modeling Sciences Center at Arizona State University, decided to construct a mathematical model, using data from an actual norovirus outbreak in the early 2000s aboard a cruise ship. She “tweaked the parameters” to see what might have been the most effective way to intervene: quarantining patients, cleaning up the “environment” or hand-washing. The study published on Tuesday in Royal Society Open Science.

Quarantining wouldn’t be all that helpful, Towers and her collaborators concluded. Some people who contract norovirus have mild symptoms and don’t bother to report them — or may show no symptoms at all. But they can still spread the disease.

The strategy of wiping down surfaces with a chlorine-bleach solution does have an impact. But in the model, it only reduced the outbreak size by 10 percent, says Towers: “It’s easy to miss an area and you can’t wash all surfaces — like a carpeted surface — with chlorine bleach.” And because person-to-person is the dominant way the virus spreads, even a thorough cleaning can’t stop transmission when people engage in ordinary activities like shaking hands. If you then touch your face, virus particles can gain entree to your body via the eyes, nose or mouth.

But oh my goodness, washing hands was nearly magical. If 80 percent of the cruise ship passengers who did not wash their hands were to change their hygiene habits, the outbreak would be halted.

But here’s the rub-a-dub-dub. “You can’t force people to wash their hands,” says Towers. And a lot of people don’t do it.

“This is going to sound gross,” says Dr. Mark Gendreau, the chief medical officer for Beverly and Addison Gilbert Hospitals in Massachusetts, “but [in some countries] 50 percent or more of the population never washes their hands after going to the bathroom. That’s number 1 and number 2.” (FYI, men tend to be more lax than women.)

Even if you do wash, you may be doing a slipshod job. Hand-washing gurus say you need to devote 20 seconds to the task. But one survey found that only 5 percent of subjects washed for 15 seconds or more.

Then there are the details to master: Wet hands first, then add soap because you’ll get a better lather that way, which is key to breaking down the norovirus, says Gendreau. Alcohol-based gel sanitizers aren’t as effective in breaking down norovirus particles because soap itself “dismantles the proteins on the virus itself,” he says. “The gel won’t do that effectively but there’s going to be some benefit by rubbing your hands.”

The problem in poor countries, says Towers, is that the water supply itself may be contaminated. Even if the water is okay, Gendreau points out that there may not be a custom of washing after going to the toilet or before eating. Getting everyone in the world to practice hand hygiene is the goal of Global Handwashing Day, an October 15 event.

As for people who believe that it’s good to expose your body to microbes, Gendreau notes there is no evidence that norovirus particles bring benefits. The microbiome of your skin — the bacteria that can help keep you healthy — exists about five layers down from the surface. Norovirus particles sit on the surface of your skin and “don’t get into the microbiome,” he says. But they are potentially risky to your health when you touch your face as you do (on average) … 200 … times … a … day.

Not that I’m paranoid or anything, but now I’m going to go wash my hands. With soap.

Copyright 2018 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.
Posted in Health, Infectious Disease, News | Tagged , , |

At Risk For Type 2 Diabetes?

One in three American adults is at risk for developing Type 2 Diabetes, which is why Gwinnett, Newton, and Rockdale County Health Departments are partnering with Diabetes “You Can Win” Foundation to participate in American Diabetes Association Alert Day®.

Continue reading

Posted in Diabetes, News |

Pre-teen Vaccination Week 2018

What would you rather face, a shot that lasts a second or a disease that lasts a lot longer?

In an effort to protect every adult and child, the Georgia Department of Public Health established Georgia Preteen Vaccine Awareness Week, observed March 12-16, 2018, to serve as a reminder for parents to talk with their preteens and teens about getting immunized against vaccine-preventable diseases.

“Preteens are at an age where they are becoming more aware of their health decisions. They know they should go to the doctor and get vaccinated, yet many times they just don’t go — and parents don’t see it as a priority,” said Sheila Lovett, Immunization Program Director for the Georgia Department of Public Health. “Parents, make it a priority to vaccinate your preteen against preventable diseases.”

According to the Georgia Department of Public Health Rule (511-2-2), all students born on or after January 1, 2002, entering or transferring into seventh grade and any “new entrant” into eighth -12th grades in Georgia need proof of an adolescent pertussis (whooping cough) booster vaccination (called “Tdap”) AND an adolescent meningococcal vaccination (MenACWY). This law affects all public and private schools including, but not limited to, charter schools, community schools, juvenile court schools and other alternative school settings (excluding homeschool).

Vaccines are the best defense we have against serious, preventable and sometimes deadly contagious diseases. They help avoid expensive therapies and hospitalization needed to treat infectious diseases like influenza and meningitis. Immunizations also reduce absences both at school and after school activities and decrease the spread of illness at home, school and the community.

The CDC currently recommends the following vaccines for preteens and teens:

  • Tetanus, Diphtheria and Pertussis (Tdap)
  • Influenza (flu)
  • Human Papillomavirus (HPV)
  • Meningococcal Disease (MenACWY)

 

Georgia Preteen Vaccine Awareness Week is an opportunity to raise awareness through schools, health care providers and the media regarding preteen immunizations, particularly Georgia’s pertussis and meningococcal requirements for incoming seventh-grade students. Speak with your physician today to find out if your preteen is up-to-date.

Helpful Links

Georgia Department of Public Health Immunizations 

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention – Vaccines For Your Children

GNR Health Child Immunizations 

Posted in Immunizations, News |

CDC Offers Refresher on Safe-sleep Practices for Infants

Article written by AAFP News Staff on January 22, 2018. 

About 3,500 sleep-related infant deaths occur each year in the Unites States, including those from sudden infant death syndrome, accidental suffocation and unknown causes.

That’s according to new information from the CDC, which saw sharp declines in sleep-related deaths during the 1990s after the national Back to Sleep safe sleep campaign (now called Safe to Sleep(www1.nichd.nih.gov)) debuted. However, this progress has slowed since the late 1990s, and data reported in a new CDC Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR)(www.cdc.gov) and related Vital Signs(www.cdc.gov) report showed the risk for infant sleep-related deaths persists.

“Unfortunately, too many babies in this country are lost to sleep-related deaths that might be prevented,” said former CDC Director Brenda Fitzgerald, M.D., in a news release.(www.cdc.gov) “We must do more to ensure every family knows the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) recommendations(pediatrics.aappublications.org) — babies should sleep on their backs, without any toys or soft bedding, and in their own crib. Parents are encouraged to share a room with the baby, but not the same bed. These strategies will help reduce the risk and protect our babies from harm.”

Data on Unsafe Sleep

The CDC analyzed 2009-2015 data from the Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System (PRAMS) to describe sleep practices for babies. A state-based surveillance system, PRAMS has monitored self-reported behaviors and experiences before, during and after pregnancy among women with a recent U.S. live birth since the late 1980s.

The CDC examined 2015 data reported by mothers on non-supine sleep positioning, bed-sharing and use of soft bedding (pillows, blankets, bumper pads, stuffed toys and sleep positioners) from states with available data.

Among states included in that analysis,

  • about 22 percent of mothers reported placing their baby to sleep on his or her side or stomach,
  • more than 61 percent reported bed-sharing with their baby and
  • about 39 percent of mothers reported using soft bedding in the baby’s sleep area.

The percentage of mothers who reported placing their baby on his or her side or stomach to sleep varied by state, ranging from about 12 percent in Wisconsin to about 34 percent in Louisiana.

Placing babies on their side or stomach to sleep was more common among mothers who were non-Hispanic black, younger than age 25, or had 12 or fewer years of education.

Recommendations for Safe Sleep

The CDC recommends health care professionals do the following to promote safe sleep:

  • Advise caregivers to place babies on their back for every sleep period; keep soft bedding such as blankets, pillows and other soft objects out of the baby’s sleep area; and share a room — but not a bed — with their babies.
  • Ask caregivers about how they position their baby to sleep, identify challenges they face in following safe sleep recommendations, and help them find solutions.
  • Model safe sleep practices in hospitals.
  • Continue to follow the latest recommendations from the AAP for safe sleep.

“This report shows that we need to do better at promoting and following safe sleep recommendations,” said Jennifer Bombard, M.S.P.H., a scientist in the CDC’s Division of Reproductive Health and lead author of the analysis, in the news release. “This is particularly important for populations where data show infants may be at a higher risk of sleep-related deaths.”

The CDC said health care professionals can increase the likelihood that parents follow AAP recommendations by giving them accurate advice about safe sleep for babies. A previous study showed that only 55 percent of mothers reported receiving correct advice about safe sleep during pregnancy and baby care visits, 20 percent said they got no advice, and 25 percent reported getting incorrect advice.

Link to original story: www.aafp.org/news/health-of-the-public/20180122safesleep.html

 

Posted in Infants / Children, News |

HAPPY SEVERE WEATHER AWARENESS WEEK!

Day 1- Family Preparedness
Families should be prepared for any type of hazard that could affect their area. The best way to do this is to develop a family disaster plan.
 
The ReadyGa initiative can assist families and business to prepare for an all Hazards approach.
 
Visit ready.ga.gov or download the Ready Georgia mobile app today!

Day 2- Thunderstorms
Today’s Focus is on Thunderstorms. http://www.weather.gov/ffc/swaw_thunder

Day 3: Tornado Safety
All of Georgia is prone to tornadoes, as shown in this map depicting Georgia tornadoes from 1950-2014. The average number of days with reported tornadoes is 6 in Georgia. Tornadoes have been reported throughout the year, but are most likely to occur from March to May, with the peak in April.

Day 4: Lightening Safety
When the Thunder Roars, Go Indoors!
Read more about lightening safety: http://www.weather.gov/ffc/swaw_ltg

Day 5: Flood Preparedness

Nearly half of all flood fatalities are vehicle related. Flooding is usually divided into two categories. These categories are flash flooding and river flooding. Both of these can cause death, injury, and property destruction.
Posted in Emergency Preparedness, News, Severe Weather |

Flu: What you need to know

Flu is a viral illness that causes fever, sore throat, muscle aches and cough. Flu can weaken the body’s defenses and lead to complications like bacterial pneumonia. It can also worsen existing chronic health problems like heart disease and diabetes.

Flu season can be as early as October and as late as May. During an average flu season, more than 200,000 are hospitalized because of complications from flu. Some people, such as young children, the elderly, pregnant women and people with certain chronic health conditions are more likely to have complications related to flu.

The figure below, from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), shows peak flu activity for the United States by month for the 1982-1983 through 2015-2016 flu seasons. The “peak month of flu activity” is the month with the highest percentage of respiratory specimens testing positive for flu virus infection during that flu season.

During this 34-year period, flu activity most often peaked in February (14 seasons), followed by December (7 seasons), March (6 seasons), and January (5 seasons).

 

Peak Month of Flu Activity

1982-1983 through 2015-2016

Source: CDC

Who can get the flu?

Anyone!

During an average flu season, 10 to 20% of people are infected. Flu spreads easily from person to person when an infected person coughs or sneezes. Flu virus can also survive on surfaces outside the human body for hours. People can become infected by getting the virus on their hands, then rubbing their eyes or nose.

Healthy adults can spread the virus from one day before they have symptoms until five days after their beginning of symptoms. They can pass flu virus to others even before they feel sick. Flu viruses change every year, so immunity is not long-term.

 What are symptoms of the flu?

Typical flu symptoms include:

  • high fever
  • cough
  • sore throat
  • runny or stuffy nose
  • headache
  • muscle aches
  • extreme fatigue

Flu is different from a cold although the symptoms can overlap. In general, flu is worse than the common cold, and symptoms are more common and intense with flu. Colds are usually milder than the flu, and more likely to cause a runny or stuffy nose. People with flu usually recover completely in one to two weeks, but some people suffer severe complications. Colds generally do not result in serious health problems.

 What are complications of the flu?

Complications of flu can include bacterial pneumonia, ear infections, sinus infections, dehydration, and worsening of chronic medical conditions, such as congestive heart failure, asthma, or diabetes. Hospitalization and death can result from flu infection complications.

Who should get a flu vaccine?

The “flu shot” is approved for people age 6 months and older, including healthy people and people with chronic health conditions. Anyone wanting to protect themselves against flu should consider getting vaccinated. Vaccination is recommended for most people, especially those most likely to experience complications of the flu and people who live with or care for people at highest risk.

Those at highest risk include:

  • people 50 years and older;
  • people who live in nursing homes and other long-term care facilities that house those with long-term illnesses;
  • people with chronic health conditions;
  • women who will be pregnant during the influenza season;
  • children 6 months of age to 18 years of age.

 

People who live with or care for those at high risk for complications from influenza, including:

  • household contacts of persons at high risk for complications from the flu;
  • household contacts and out of home caregivers of children less than 6 months of age (these children are too young to be vaccinated);
  • healthcare providers.

Where can I get a flu vaccine?

Visit any one of our Health Centers today to get your flu shot.  No appointment necessary.  Most major insurances accepted.

Visit our locations page to find a Health Center near you. 

 

Additional Resources:

Everyday preventive actions that can help fight germs, like flu

What Parents Should Know

Who is at high risk for flu?

Flu Treatment

Flu Activity in Georgia

 

Sources: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Georgia Department of Public Health

Posted in Immunizations, Infectious Disease, News |