The editor of an Eastern Kentucky newspaper has joined an advocacy group's call for residents in his county to make simple, healthy lifestyle changes, serving as an example of how local newspapers and community members can engage the public to confront poor health status of the area, which is often put on the back-burner despite alarming warning signs.
Recently, the
Tri-County Diabetes Partnership declared the rate of diabetes in Floyd, Johnson and Magoffin counties
(map) "a crisis of epidemic proportions." The rate in 2002-10, the latest available, was 14 percent.
If the federal
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention "saw a similar increase in any other illness, they would probably declare a national emergency,? said J.D. Miller, vice president of medical affairs for
Appalachian Regional Healthcare, who chaired the meeting.
The group's statement was an appropriate response to direct public's attention to the imperative of addressing the area's skyrocketing rate of the disease, Ralph Davis of
The Floyd County Times wrote in an editorial.
Diabetes will remain a crisis unless we do something about it, said Davis, and "if you have been waiting for a crisis before making healthy lifestyle changes, we?ve got one for you. In fact, we have several," Davis said.
The Central Appalachian region suffers from disproportionate rates of diabetes, cancer and heart disease, and Floyd, Magoffin and Johnson counties have much higher rates of obesity than state and national averages, Davis notes. Floyd County ranks last among the state?s 120 counties in overall health measures, and Johnson and Magoffin counties are ranked 108th and 104th, respectively.
To do something about this problem, Davis calls for concentrated attention by health care providers and government officials, but the problem won't be solved without action from the community and individuals, he says. Simple, healthy lifestyle changes are needed.
"It?s going to require the conscious decision by everyone in the region to do what they can to improve their diet and exercise habits, and to encourage their friends and family to do the same," said Davis.
Calls like Davis's are needed even more in most of the counties that surround the three counties, based on data from the CDC's Behavioral Risk Surveillance System. The counties in dark blue had rates above 14 percent; the highest was Greenup, at 17 percent.
Bourbon County residents are some of the nation's most sleep-deprived, according to county-level data from a study by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The study is based on a 2009 survey that asked 432,000 people how many times...
State officials and health leaders will gather April 2 at the Kentucky History Center in Frankfort to celebrate Kentucky?s successes in implementing strategies for improving health at the community level, as reflected by the latest edition of County Health...
Kentucky Homeplace has been awarded a second gift of $150,000 from the Anthem Foundation to continue its diabetes self-management education project in Appalachian Kentucky counties that have high rates of diabetes but lack providers to help address it....
By Molly Burchett Kentucky Health News A new report of the national county health rankings shows several Kentucky counties have improved in the last two years while others have gotten significantly worse. For the second year in a row, Oldham County ranked...
In three-fourths of Kentucky's counties, more than 30 percent of adults say they get no physical activity in their leisure time, according to new survey data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The statewide average is 30.1 percent....