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New report finds apprenticeships increasing for WA; TN nursing shortage slated to continue amid federal education changes; NC college students made away of on-campus resources to fight food insecurity; DOJ will miss deadline to release all Epstein files; new program provides glasses to visually impaired Virginians; Line 5 pipeline fight continues in Midwest states; and NY Gov. Kathy Hochul agrees to sign medical aid in dying bill in early 2026.

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Legal fights over free speech, federal power, and public accountability take center stage as courts, campuses and communities confront the reach of government authority.

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States are waiting to hear how much money they'll get from the Rural Health Transformation Program, the DHS is incentivizing local law enforcement to join the federal immigration crackdown and Texas is creating its own Appalachian Trail.

Keeping WV Poor White Women Alive

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Monday, September 16, 2013   

CHARLESTON, W. Va. - The life expectancy of white, female high school dropouts has dropped dramatically over the past 20 years, according to researchers in population, human longevity and public health. Poor, undereducated, white American women can now expect to die five years earlier than they did in the last generation.

Monica Potts wrote an eye-opening article, "What's Killing Poor White Women?", published in September 2013 issue of "The American Prospect." In it, she pulled together research that has social scientists scrambling to find answers.

"One of the researchers I talked to said he believes that the root cause was this dramatic increase in the amount of economic and other stressers that that population faces," she said.

Obesity, diabetes, dead-end jobs, low wages, alcohol, drugs such as OxyContin and meth, and bad marriage partners are all being suggested as stress factors.

Statistics show this is a serious issue in West Virginia. Renate Pore with West Virginians for Affordable Health Care said a Harvard study found that the state had some of the country's worst mortality numbers, especially in the southern coalfields. Some women there are actually slowly dying of poverty, she said.

"People live much sicker and die much younger in McDowell, Logan and some of those other southern West Virginia counties," Poor said, "and it's all associated with poverty."

The research points to what is called "toxic stress" as one factor, Poor explained. The constant, low-level worry that comes from economic insecurity makes it much harder to be in control and make good decisions, she said.

"They do experience more stress than people at the upper level. You may think people who have big jobs, those are very stressful jobs. But, in effect, those people do have more control over their lives," she noted.

Economic trends that are increasing the gap between rich and poor are hard on these women, Poor added. Studies show that high school dropouts have been affected more than most by the recent proliferation of low-wage, dead-end jobs.

On a more positive note, Pore pointed to moves in the right direction: expanding the Medicaid system, treating substance abuse and smoking, and increasing education about what people eat.

People working on the issue said changing West Virginians' diet and health care should help.

The article is available at http://prospect.org.




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