Posts Tagged ‘high school’

Be Part of the Mental Health Solution

March 29th, 2013

Students can’t be academically successful when they’re battling anxiety, depression, substance abuse and other common conditions.  Nearly 50% of lifetime mental disorders begin by the mid-teens.  That’s why we’ve launched a partnership with Kognito Interactive to educate middle and high-school teachers how to recognize signs of depression and other mental health disorders that have the potential to lead to low academic achievement, violence or even suicide. At Risk for Middle School Educators and At Risk for High School Teachers are hour-long, avatar-based online training programs where teachers, administrators and staff learn to recognize and help when a student’s behavior and appearance may be a sign of psychological distress, such as depression, anxiety or substance abuse. 

When equipped with the appropriate knowledge on how to handle sensitive situations, teachers and staff have a better chance of success in connecting the student with help.  At-Risk simulations are the first online trainings available to provide realistic and risk-free role-play exercises in identifying, speaking with, and referring troubled youth.  Developed with input from teachers and some of the country’s leading authorities on youth suicide prevention, At-Risk helps connect students to treatment early on- which is critical to improving mental health outcomes. 

This professional development opportunity is free and available to high schools and middle schools in Arizona.  It only takes an hour to complete, doesn’t need to take away from class time, and comes with a certificate of completion.  It can also be paused and restarted without having to start from the beginning.  To take the training…  sign in at the following links for Middle School and High School.

 

It’s Back to School for Teen Drivers

August 29th, 2011

Back-to-school time means that a new bolus of high-schoolers that got their license over the summer are hitting the streets for the first time during the school year.  All the data suggests that the first year of driving is an especially important time for safe driving skill development.  Fortunately, our State has a “Graduated Drivers License” provision to help better develop skills and limit distractions- keys to safe driving habits. 

So what’s a Graduated Driver’s License?  It means that for the first 6 months that a teen holds a license they can’t drive between midnight and 5 a.m. unless they have a parent in the car or are driving directly to or from a school or religious activity, a job or a family emergency.  They’re also limited to 1 passenger under 18 (except for siblings).  These limits are based on data that shows that late night driving and driving with other teen peer passengers sharply increase the risks of having a car crash.  There are three basic steps to this system, detailed on ADOT’s website.  A system like ours is estimated to reduce fatal crashes among 16 year olds by 20%. 

If you’re a concerned Arizona parent that’s looking for additional (evidence based) guidance that goes above and beyond the state limits check out (and share) the CDC’s new 60-second “Parents Are the Key” video about safe teen driving.  Parents can make a positive difference when it comes to preventing the number one killer of teens in the United States—car crashes by: 1) making sure your teen always wears a seat belt; 2) limiting your teen’s nighttime driving; 3) limiting the number of teen passengers allowed in the car to 1 or 2 at the most; and 4) having clear expectations about texting and phone use while your teen drives. You might also want to reinforce your rules with a Parent-Teen Driving AgreementYou can also join a conversation about safe teen driving on the Facebook.

How Come High School Looks so Hard Today?

July 19th, 2011

If you’re like me, and your high school teen asks for help with math, you probably said to yourself or them “what the heck is thatI can’t help you- you’ll have to read the chapter”.  The math work might seem harder today partly because today’s teens weren’t lead poisoned like my generation was (people in their late 40’s and 50’s).

 In the late 1960’s it became clear that kids were being poisoned by lead in their environment, mostly from leaded gasoline, lead in paint, and lead solder in canned food.  If you’re in your 40’s you probably remember the old “fill’er up with ethyl” commercials.  They were talking about tetra-ethyl lead- which was used as an additive in gasoline to enhance performance.  Lead in gas and the other sources dramatically increased the blood lead levels in kids during the late 1950s and early 1960s- resulting in negative health impacts including cognitive impairment.

 Lead was phased of gas in the late 1960’s and 1970’s- and was removed from paint in 1978, but not before it cost our generation at least 5 IQ points (probably more).  Kids in the 60’s had average blood levels of more than 25 micrograms per deciliter of blood (μg/dL) – a level that today is considered severe lead poisoning.  In kids younger than 6 years old- the lead crosses the “blood-brain barrier” causing permanent cognitive impairment (after 6 years old the barrier is sealed and lead is less harmful because Pb can’t pass as readily into the brain).  Fortunately, the public health interventions (removing Pb from gas, paint, and cans) worked and today 99.9% of Arizona kids have blood lead levels below the standard of 10 μg/dL.     

 The kids that we do find with lead poisoning (about 300 per year) seem to live in certain Zip Codes where the houses were built when lead based paint was still being used. Here’s our latest surveillance report with the information.  Our Targeted Childhood Lead Poisoning Screening Plan provides a listing of Arizona’s high-risk ZIP Codes to help physicians decide which kids to test.  We’re working on an update to the targeted screening plan- which should be available later this year.  The major environmental lead sources in Arizona are lead based paint in older neighborhoods, families using lead containing pottery for cooking, and certain folk remedies called azarcon and greta.