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September / October 2009
Volume 21, Number 5
 |
Quotations of interest that may affect counties |
HEALTH SCARE
Although individual school districts may
choose to offer health education, the Texas
Education Agency has eliminated the state
requirement that they must do so. Only
two other states in the country—Colorado
and Oklahoma—lack a health education
requirement.
The TEA’s hands were tied; the education
reform bill, HB 3, that passed this
spring, mandates that high school students
must take six elective courses, as opposed
to the current standard of three-and-a-half,
and the agency needed to free up time in
students’ schedules for these new electives.
How poorly does Texas rank when it
comes to public health? A quick overview:
- Teen pregnancy rate: Texas has the
third-highest teen pregnancy rate in
the nation.
- STDs: Texas has the fourth-highest
rate of AIDS cases and the tenth-highest
rate of syphilis cases.
- Physical inactivity: Texas has the eighth highest
rate of physical inactivity.
- Diabetes: Texas has the tenth-highest
rate of diabetes.
- Obesity: Texas has the fourteenthhighest
rate of obesity.
—
Texas Monthly
GOING MAD
The American Psychiatric Association (is)
grimly — and rather inexpertly — debating
whether avid shopping should be considered
a sign of mental illness. The fifth edition of
the association’s Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual of Mental Disorders is expected in
2012. The APA isn’t just deciding the fate of
shopaholics; it’s also debating whether overuse
of the Internet, “excessive” sexual activity,
apathy, and even prolonged bitterness
should be viewed, quite seriously, as brain
“disorders.”
Quite how the association will decide
when normal kvetching becomes a sickness—
or reasonable amounts of sex become
excessive—is still anyone’s guess. Behind
the APA’s doors in Arlington, Va., the fine
points of the debate are creating quite a few
headaches. And they’re also causing a rather
public dust-up.
The association has no clear definition of
the cutoff between normal and pathological
responses to life’s letdowns. To those of us
following the debates as closely as the association
will allow, it’s apparent that the DSM
revisions have become a train wreck. The
problem is, everyone involved has signed
a contract promising not to share publicly
what’s going on.
— Slate.com
CRYSTAL BALL
9:46 AM Aug 16th: On health care reform,
summarizing everything, best bet is
that Congress Dems won’t do to Obama
what they did to Clinton: They’ll pass a bill
9:48 AM Aug 16th: But this isn’t going
to be the bill Obama wanted. Much scaled
back in cost, reach, taxes. Will still be massively
unpopular w/GOP.
9:50 AM Aug 16th: 2010 midterm contests
may be much affected, in part because
GOP voters will be motivated to show up at
polls disproportionately.
— “Tweets” sent from Larry Sabato, the
director of the Center for Politics at The
University of Virginia, via the Web site/text
messaging service Twitter. Sabato runs a
political analysis Web site called Crystal Ball.
VIRTUAL TOWNHALL
It was interesting to read an editorial that
told residents of San Jose, California, that if
they wanted to help shape the city’s 20-year
general plan and influence key city planning
decisions, they could opt for an Internet
encounter. Citizens could attend monthly
meetings at City Hall, “or — and this might
be more fun — go to the new wiki site,” the
San Jose Mercury News wrote.
That site lets residents click and type what
they would like San Jose to look like, instead
of having to drive, park and sit in a stuffy
meeting room in order to express their opinions.
The city learned about this particular
wiki technology from a Charlotte, N orth
Carolina, pilot project for transit-oriented
development. O ther state and local governments
have used public comment software
or other electronic tools for public projects.
For instance, when planners in the Atlanta
region wanted to design a 22-mile railroad
around downtown, they used technology
that collected public responses, stored them
by topic, and republished some of the comments
so interested residents could follow
the discussions.
— Governing.com |