Selected data concerning public health programs in Connecticut
and the health of Connecticut's residents

Published by:

State of Connecticut
Department of Public Health and Addiction Services
April, 1995

First Printing

This publication is not copyrighted.   Readers may duplicate and use freely all or part of the material it contains; however, the Department of Public Health and Addiction Services requests acknowledgment of any information reprinted, quoted, or used in any way.

Suggested Citation:

Bower, C.E., D. Iodice, C. Rankl, and D.M. Winiarski. 1995.  Connecticut health 1994: Selected data concerning public health programs in Connecticut and the health of Connecticut's residents. Hartford, CT: Connecticut Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, 128 pp.

Single copies of this book may be obtained without charge from the CT Department of Public Health. Please call 860-509-7218.


ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We gratefully acknowledge the contributions of the following people, who provided data, critically reviewed the text, and provided support and assistance throughout the development and production of this publication:

Mary Adams, Eileen Alvarado, Federico Amadeo, Norman Armondino, Laura Victoria Barrera, Kay Berris, Al Bidorini, Vicki Carlson, Marcie Cavacas, Pat Checko, Carol Christoffers, Kathy Cobb, Susan Coes, George Cooper, Shirley Cotton, Bill Dahn, Paula Delage, Lois Desmarais, Dennis Dix, Carolyn Jean Dupuy, Linda Durante, Carol Fineout, Tom Furgalack, Mary Kapp, Elise Gaulin-Kremer, Joe Gillen, Ruth Gitchell, Jim Hadler, Sanders Hawkins, Sharon Hunter, Jerry Iwan, Ray Jarema, Heidi Jenkins, Liz Johnston, Jennifer Klein, Deanie LaPlante, Valerie Leal, Linda Lynch, John Maltese, Joe Marino, Jann Moody, Michelle Morris, Lloyd Mueller, Chris Murphy, Barbara Nevins, Sandra Newman, Karen Nolen, Lynn Noyes, Noreen Passardi, Pat Piepul, Tony Polednak, Bea Powell, Walter Rebenske, Bill Sawicki, Frank Schaub, Bob Schreiber, Paul Schur, Sandra Selenskas, Joan Shaia, Gordon Shand, Alan Siniscalchi, Ron Skomro, Paul Smith, Anita Steeves, Carolyn Sucheki, Dottie Trebisacci, Bill Ulrich, Beth Weinstein.


PREFACE

Connecticut Health 1994 is the first in a series of annual publications providing an overview of public health programs in Connecticut and the health of Connecticut residents. It replaces and expands the series of booklets entitled Connecticut Health Data, which was published each year from 1982 through 1991.

The information presented here generally pertains to the most recent 12-month period for which complete data were available at the time of compilation. Depending on the specific program or activity, the period may be a calendar year, CY (January 1 through December 31 of the named year), a state fiscal year, SFY (July 1 through June 30 of the named year), or a federal fiscal year, FFY (October 1 through September 30 of the named year). Data from one or more prior years and for the United States sometimes are included for comparison. For cumulative statistics (numbers of licensed professionals, etc.) numbers typically are presented "as of" the date of submission for publication; in future editions, they will be standardized to the last day of a given calendar year, state fiscal year, or federal fiscal year.

This book is not intended to be a complete and fully comprehensive aggregation of health statistics; rather, it is a compendium of useful information for enabling informed policy decisions, for public education, and for basic reference. It contains an array of key data from the many divisions within the Department of Public Health and Addiction Services (DPHAS) and from other sources, including other state agencies and prior, more comprehensive publications. For ease of reference, the material is divided into 12 chapters, which are arranged by subject area rather than by the organizational structure of DPHAS; hence, data gathered by any given DPHAS subdivision may be found in one or more chapters. The sources of all data are documented to enable readers to pursue topics of interest in greater depth.

For further information, readers are encouraged to contact staff in the DPHAS division referenced at the end of the entry of interest. An abridged department telephone directory, arranged according to the major organizational divisions within DPHAS, is included as an appendix.


CONTENTS

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

PREFACE

1 DEMOGRAPHICS

Population Estimates

Unemployment

2 VITAL STATISTICS

Births, Deaths, Marriages, and Divorces

Leading Causes of Death

Fetal and Infant Deaths

Legal Induced Abortions

3 RISK FACTORS

Infant and Maternal Health Indicators

Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System

Connecticut Health Check: Health Risk Appraisal for Youth

4 INFECTIOUS DISEASES

Reportable Diseases

Rabies and Other Zoonoses

Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS)

Sexually Transmitted Diseases

Tuberculosis Prevention and Control

5 CANCER

Incidence of Cancer

Clinical Stage of Disease at Diagnosis

6 ALCOHOL AND DRUG ADDICTION

Prevalence of Substance Abuse

Community-based Treatment Programs

Prevention Programs

Pre-trial Alcohol Education System (PAES)

7 FAMILY HEALTH

Adolescent Pregnancy Prevention & Young Parent Program

Healthy Start

Special Supplemental Food Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC)

Genetics

Sudden Infant Death Syndrome

Immunizations

Healthy Steps

Children with Special Health Care Needs

Nutrition

8 ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH

Asbestos

Food Protection

Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention

Occupational Health Surveillance

Radon

Recreational Health and Safety

On-site Sewage Disposal and Groundwater Control

Water Supplies

9 LABORATORY SERVICES

State Laboratory Services

Biological Sciences

Laboratory Standards and Clinical Chemistry

Environmental Chemistry

Toxicology and Criminology

10 HEALTH PROFESSIONALS

Medical and Other Health Service Professions

Emergency Medical Service Professions

Environmental Health Professions

11 FACILITIES

Long-term Care Facilities, Acute Care and Chronic Disease Hospitals, Outpatient Clinics, Home Health Care Agencies, and Specialty Facilities

Mental Health and Substance Abuse Facilities

Well-child Clinics, Day Care Centers, and Day Care Homes

Day and Residential Youth Camps

Funeral Homes and Optical Establishments

Laboratories

12 HEALTH CARE DELIVERY

Local Health Departments

School-based Health Centers

Community Health Centers

Sexual Assault Crisis Services

Acute Care

Home Health Care

Long-term Care

APPENDICES

Most Popular Names for Babies

Federal Poverty Guidelines


1 DEMOGRAPHICS

Population Estimates

Unemployment
 


1.1 Population Estimates

Mid-year town population estimates for 1993 were issued in October, 1994 by the DPHAS Health Research and Data Analysis Unit (1). These estimates are the basis of birth, death, and other population-based rates for 1993. The estimates indicate that since the 1990 US Census, Connecticut's population decreased by 9,806 residents.

TABLE 1-1. Connecticut population estimates, 1993, by county,a congressional district,b uniform regional service delivery area (URSDA),c and towna,d (1).


State,                        State, County,              
County,                       Congressional               
Congressional   Estimated     District,        Estimated  
District,      population     URSDA, or Town  population  
URSDA, or                                                 
Town                                                      

Connecticut      3,277,310    Town                        

                              Ashford               3,920 

County                        Avon                 14,290 

Fairfield          828,250    Barkhamsted           3,410 

Hartford           846,560    Beacon Falls          5,260 

Litchfield         176,390    Berlin               16,890 

Middlesex          144,420    Bethany               4,720 

New Haven          800,660    Bethel               17,780 

New London         248,110    Bethlehem             3,210 

Tolland            129,860    Bloomfield           19,080 

Windham            103,060    Bolton                4,710 

                              Bozrah                2,260 

Congr.                        Branford             28,150 
District                                                  

District 1         544,250    Bridgeport          138,730 

District 2         542,360    Bridgewater           1,690 

District 3         541,435    Bristol              60,570 

District 4         546,986    Brookfield           14,480 

District 5         552,352    Brooklyn              6,710 

District 6         549,927    Burlington            7,430 

                              Canaan                1,180 

URSDA                         Canterbury            4,560 

Northwestern       555,940    Canton                8,380 

North Central      945,000    Chaplin               2,060 

Eastern            383,920    Cheshire             26,160 

South Central      764,590    Chester               3,450 

Southwestern       627,860    Clinton              12,800 

                              Colchester           11,290 

Town                          Colebrook             1,340 

Andover              2,710    Columbia              4,680 

Ansonia             18,130    Cornwall              1,430 



Table 1-1 continues.

TABLE 1-1. (Continued.)


State,                       State, County,               
County,                      Congressional                
Congressional  Estimated     District,         Estimated  
District,      population    URSDA, or Town   population  
URSDA, or                                                 
Town                                                      

Town                         Town                         

Coventry           10,630    Killingworth           5,010 

Cromwell           12,480    Lebanon                6,220 

Danbury            66,420    Ledyard               14,660 

Darien             18,720    Lisbon                 3,790 

Deep River          4,350    Litchfield             8,450 

Derby              12,080    Lyme                   1,950 

Durham              5,950    Madison               15,980 

Eastford            1,350    Manchester            50,760 

Easton              6,370    Mansfield             19,020 

East Granby         4,330    Marlborough            5,670 


East Haddam         6,970    Meriden               58,970 


East Hampton       10,690    Middlebury             6,180 

East Hartford      48,970    Middlefield            3,960 


East Haven         26,530    Middletown            42,940 

East Lyme          15,270    Milford               49,360 

East Windsor        9,810    Monroe                17,380 

Ellington          11,600    Montville             16,540 

Enfield            46,010    Morris                 2,150 

Essex               5,760    Naugatuck             31,200 

Fairfield          52,960    Newington             28,490 

Farmington         21,030    Newtown               20,810 

Franklin            1,750    New Britain           73,100 

Glastonbury        28,000    New Canaan            18,420 

Goshen              2,410    New Fairfield         12,900 

Granby              9,390    New Hartford           5,970 

Greenwich          57,550    New Haven            125,630 

Griswold           10,030    New London            26,820 

Groton             43,550    New Milford           24,400 

Guilford           20,180    Norfolk                2,080 

Haddam              6,980    North Branford        13,080 

Hamden             51,960    North Canaan           3,110 

Hampton             1,630    North Haven           21,580 

Hartford          139,980    No. Stonington         4,760 

Hartland            1,900    Norwalk               79,450 

Harwinton           5,300    Norwich               35,470 

Hebron              7,390    Old Lyme               6,480 

Kent                3,040    Old Saybrook           9,350 

Killingly          16,070    Orange                12,490 



Table 1-1 continues.

TABLE 1-1. (Continued.)


State,                        State, County,              
County,                       Congressional               
Congressional   Estimated     District,        Estimated  
District,      population     URSDA, or Town  population  
URSDA, or                                                 
Town                                                      

Town                          Town                        

Oxford               9,070    Suffield             11,350 

Plainfield          14,280    Thomaston             7,130 

Plainville          17,300    Thompson              8,580 

Plymouth            11,660    Tolland              11,360 

Pomfret              3,250    Torrington           33,720 

Portland             8,410    Trumbull             31,660 

Preston              4,980    Union                   630 

Prospect             8,010    Vernon               29,950 

Putnam               8,720    Voluntown             2,220 

Redding              7,990    Wallingford          41,090 

Ridgefield          21,300    Warren                1,230 

Rocky Hill          17,060    Washington            3,980 

Roxbury              1,860    Waterbury           108,950 

Salem                3,450    Waterford            17,460 

Salisbury            4,040    Watertown            20,930 

Scotland             1,230    Westbrook             5,320 

Seymour             14,480    Weston                8,960 

Sharon               2,950    Westport             24,610 

Shelton             35,760    West Hartford        58,370 


Sherman              2,950    West Haven           53,500 

Simsbury            22,110    Wethersfield         24,770 

Somers               9,310    Willington            6,220 


Southbury           15,740    Wilton               16,170 

Southington         38,760    Winchester           11,300 

South Windsor       22,350    Windham              21,890 

Sprague              2,960    Windsor              27,990 

Stafford            11,650    Windsor Locks        12,420 

Stamford           109,070    Wolcott              14,110 

Sterling             2,580    Woodbridge            8,070 

Stonington          16,200    Woodbury              8,420 

Stratford           47,810    Woodstock             6,230 



a From 1993 Connecticut population estimates (1).

b The estimated population of each congressional district is equal to the sum of the populations of its constituent towns (2). The populations of four towns are divided between two districts (Bolton, Dist. 1,2; Monroe, Dist. 4,5; Southbury, Dist. 5,6; and Woodbridge, Dist. 3,5). The proportions of the populations of these towns assigned to the respective districts are the same as those used for congressional districts in the 1994 State Register & Manual (2), which employed 1990 US Census data.

Footnotes to Table 1-1 continue.

Footnotes to Table 1-1 (continued):

c The Uniform Regional Service Delivery Areas were established by Connecticut Special Act 92-20, as amended by Public Acts 93-262 and 93-381 (3). Estimates for each URSDA consist of the sum of the 1993 estimated populations of its constituent towns.

d Town-level estimates are based on three components: 1) a July 1, 1990 base population, which is the April 1, 1990 US Census count plus the natural increase in population (births minus deaths) during the 3-month period of April to June, 1990; 2) changes in group quarters (e.g., populations of colleges, nursing homes, correctional institutions, psychiatric hospitals, institutions for the mentally retarded, etc.) and natural increase in population (births minus deaths, using preliminary 1993 data and 1992 final data for births and deaths); and 3) changes in four statistical indicators (motor vehicle registrations, voter registrations, elementary school enrollment, and housing units). Town-level component data and a more detailed discussion of methodology are available from the Health Research and Data Analysis Unit.

OF NOTE

Ten Connecticut towns (New Haven, Bridgeport, New Britain, Mansfield, Norwich, West Hartford, New London, Groton, Stratford, East Hartford) had population decreases of more than 1,000 between 1990 and 1993, while Stamford and Norwalk each gained more than 1,000 in population. New Haven lost the most people (4,844) and Norwalk gained the most (1,119) (4).

The resident population of the United States plus Armed Forces overseas was estimated to be 259,681,000 on January 1, 1994 (5) The estimated world population was 5,643,290,000 (6).

About 5.5% of the 105 billion people born since the dawn of the human race are alive today, according to demographer Carl Haub of the Population Reference Bureau(7).

REFERENCES

(1) Estimated populations in Connecticut as of July 1, 1993. 1994. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Office of Strategic Planning and Information Services, Health Research and Data Analysis Unit, Hartford, CT.

(2) Connecticut congressional districts. 1994. In: Register & Manual, 1994. State of Connecticut, Secretary of the State. Hartford, CT, p. 663-668.

(3) Final uniform regions for state health and human services agencies, January, 1994. Page 56 in: Health and human services reorganization. Progress report to the Connecticut General Assembly, January 1, 1994. Office of Policy and Management, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, and Department of Social Services. Hartford, CT.

(4) Estimated populations in Connecticut as of July 1, 1993. Unpublished worksheet sorted by change in population size from 1990 to 1993. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Office of Strategic Planning and Information Services, Health Research and Data Analysis Unit, Hartford, CT.

(5) Estimates of the population of the United States to January 1, 1994. Current population reports: Population estimates and projections. US Department of Commerce, Economics and Statistics Administration, Bureau of the Census. Publ. No. P25-1114, March 1994.

(6) US Bureau of the Census. 1994. Statistical abstract of the United States: 1994 (114th edition). Washington, DC.

(7) Otten, A.L. 1995. People patterns: Odds and ends. Wall Street Journal, February 24, 1995, page B1.

1.2 Unemployment

Labor force data by place of residence are compiled annually by the Connecticut Labor Department.

TABLE 1-2. Annual averagea labor force, employed, and unemployed in CY 1993 for the State of Connecticut and cities with labor forces of 20,000 or more people (1).


                 Labor       No.         No.        Percent   
State or city    force     employed   unemployed  unemployed  

Connecticut     1,788,000  1,678,000      111,000        6.2% 



Bridgeport         64,764     58,604        6,160        9.5% 

Bristol            34,666     32,118        2,548        7.4% 

Danbury            38,709     36,318        2,391        6.2% 

East Hartford      28,568     26,077        2,491        8.7% 

Enfield            25,459     23,767        1,692        6.6% 

Fairfield          27,909     26,642        1,267        4.5% 

Greenwich          31,091     30,086        1,005        3.2% 

Hamden             29,252     27,696        1,556        5.3% 

Hartford           57,662     51,674        5,988       10.4% 

Manchester         29,713     27,674        2,039        6.9% 

Meriden            32,067     29,507        2,560        8.0% 

Middletown         24,644     22,927        1,717        7.0% 

Milford            28,058     26,141        1,917        6.8% 

New Britain        37,355     34,083        3,272        8.8% 

New Haven          58,495     54,566        3,929        6.7% 

Norwalk            48,774     46,465        2,309        4.7% 

Shelton            20,387     19,088        1,299        6.4% 

Southington        22,181     20,850        1,331        6.0% 

Stamford           64,334     61,053        3,281        5.1% 

Stratford          26,608     24,757        1,851        7.0% 

Torrington         20,543     19,015        1,528        7.4% 

Wallingford        23,448     22,029        1,419        6.1% 

Waterbury          55,798     51,013        4,785        8.6% 

West Hartford      29,981     28,596        1,385        4.6% 

West Haven         30,302     28,237        2,065        6.8% 



a "Annual average" refers to the average of 12 calendar months.

OF NOTE

The 1993 annual average unemployment for the United States was 6.8% or 8,734,000 individuals (1).

REFERENCE

(1) Connecticut labor force data for labor market areas and towns (by place of residence). Annual average 1993. 1994. State of Connecticut, Department of Labor, Office of Research, Wethersfield, CT. 2 pp.


2 VITAL STATISTICS

Births, Deaths, Marriages, and Divorces

Leading Causes of Death

Fetal and Infant Deaths

Legal Induced Abortions
 


2.1 Births, Deaths, Marriages, and Divorces

The Department of Public Health and Addiction Services maintains a registry of vital events--births, deaths, marriages, and divorces--for the State of Connecticut, and publishes an annual statistical summary in its Registration Report (1). The Registration Report, which contains detailed analyses of birth and death data, is available from the DPHAS Health Research and Data Analysis Unit. The most popular names given to babies born in 1993 are listed in Appendix 1.

TABLE 2-1. Live births, deaths, marriages, and divorces of

Connecticut residents in CY 1990 (1).


Event                 Number     Rate      

Live births            50,098        15.2b 

Deaths                 27,545         8.4b 

Marriages             26,046a        15.8c 

Divorces               11,617         7.1c 



a Marriage data are based on the number of events occurring in Connecticut

and do not necessarily reflect the residence of either party.

b Based on number of events per 1,000 population.

c Based on number of individuals married or divorced per 1,000 population,

not on number of events.

TABLE 2-2. Connecticut population, resident live births, and deaths by race and Hispanic ethnicity for CY 1990 (1,2).


                                       Live         Deaths   
Population       births                   

Race or              No.       %          Rateb          Rateb, 
ethnicitya                         No.             No.     c    

Race                                                            

White            2,859,353  87.0  41,501    14.5  25,441    8.9 

Black              274,269   8.3   6,196    22.6   1,827    6.7 

Other              153,494   4.7   1,093     7.1      99    0.6 

Unknown                  -     -   1,308       -     178      - 

TOTAL            3,287,116   100  50,098    15.2  27,545    8.4 

Ethnicity                                                       

Hispanic           213,116   6.5   5,299    24.9     487   2.3d 
ethnicity                                                       

Non-Hispanic     3,074,000  93.5  40,100    13.0  27,057    8.8 

Unknown                  -     -   4,699       -       1      - 

TOTAL            3,287,116   100  50,098    15.2  27,545    8.4 



a Race and ethnicity are separate categories. Hence, individuals of Hispanic ethnicity may be of

any race and are also included in the race category statistics as white, black, other, or unknown.

b These are crude birth and death rates (no. events per 1,000 population, not adjusted for age).

c Crude death rates among races are not directly comparable, because of the different age compo-

sitions of the racial subgroups. Consequently, for this period, the Connecticut age-adjusted

mortality rate for blacks was about 1.4 greater than for whites, even though the crude death rate

was lower. (See introduction to Section 2.2 for explanation of age-adjusted mortality rates.)

d The low death rate for Hispanics is due in part to under-utilization of the "Hispanic origin"

item on Connecticut death certificates. This item was added to the death certificates in 1989.

OF NOTE

In CY 1990, residents of Canaan had the highest birth rate (24.6 per 1,000 population), and residents of Union had the lowest rate (4.9 per 1,000).

Canaan had the highest resident crude death rate* (14.2 per 1,000) and Hartland had the lowest (1.6 per 1,000). Hartford had the highest resident infant death rate (15.1 per 1,000 live births), and South Windsor had the highest resident fetal death rate (15.7 per 1,000 live births).

No Thomaston or Middlefield residents and only one Canaan resident married in 1990.

Of the total marriages in 1990, 60% were first marriages, 11% were second marriages, and 1% were third marriages for both parties; 127 men and 153 women married for the fourth time or more.

Of the total divorces in 1990, 66% were granted to the wife and 32% were granted the husband; only one divorce was granted jointly.** Half of all the divorces involved children under age 18.

The most divorces (8.6%) occurred during the fourth year of marriage, and about four out of ten divorces occurred after 2 to 6 years of marriage.

__________

* Crude death rate is defined simply as the number of deaths per 1,000 population. Unlike the

age-adjusted death rate (see introduction to Section 2.2), it does not eliminate the effects of

differences in age composition by adjusting the rate to a standard population.

** Party to whom divorce was granted was not stated for 170 marriage dissolutions.

REFERENCES

(1) One hundred and forty-third registration report of births, marriages, divorces and deaths for the year ending December 31, 1990. 1994. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Office of Health Policy Development, Health Status Section, Hartford, CT. 92 pp. plus appendices.

(2) Connecticut population and household characteristics. 1990 census complete count data - Part A. Section 1, Connecticut state data. State of Connecticut, Office of Policy and Management, Connecticut State Data Center, Hartford, CT.

Addendum

The following data became available from DPHAS Vital Records after Section 2.1 had been completed. The CY 1991-1993 birth figures and CY 1991-1992 death figures are based on final data. The CY 1993 death figures reflect provisional data and are subject to change.

Numbers and rates (per 1,000 population) of live births to and deaths of Connecticut residents in CY 1991-1993. The denominators used in the rate calculations (DPHAS Connecticut population estimates for each respective year) are shown in parenthesis below each year.


               1991             1992             1993        
(Pop.            (Pop.       (Pop. 3,277,310)  
3,286,100)       3,279,340)                      

Event        No.     Rate      No.     Rate       No.     Rate  

Births       48,542   14.8     47,574    14.5     46,658   14.2 

Deaths       27,962    8.5     28,224     8.6     28,905    8.9 



2.2 Leading Causes of Death

The leading causes of death of Connecticut residents in CY 1990, expressed as numbers of deaths and age-adjusted mortality rates, are shown in the following tables for both sexes and individually for males and females.

An age-adjusted mortality rate (AAMR) is the number of deaths per 100,000 population, taking into account the age composition of the population. Age-specific mortality rates for a selected population are applied to the age distribution of a standard population to calculate the AAMR for the selected population. The 1940 US population was used as the standard to allow comparison with national rates published by the National Center for Health Statistics. Age-adjusted rates are artificial measurements, and should never be compared with any other type of rate or used to calculate the actual number of events.

Note that mortality rates were age adjusted to the 1970 US population standard in Connecticut's 1990 Registration Report and in all previous editions of Connecticut Health Data; hence AAMRs in those publications are not comparable with those given here.

TABLE 2-3. Leading causes of death of Connecticut residents (male and female combined) in CY 1990, and age-adjusted mortality rates (AAMRs) for Connecticut (1) and the United States (2,3). All figures are based on primary cause of death.


                                                   AAMRb     

Ranka  Cause of Death                      No.     CT      US 

     1 Diseases of the heart             9,493  132.4   152.0 

     2 All cancers                       6,812  122.9   135.0 

       Lung & other respiratory          1,802   34.8    41.4 
       cancer                                                 

       Lung cancer                       1,739   33.7    39.9 

       Colon cancer                        697   11.1     N/A 

       Pancreatic cancer                   359    6.2     N/A 

       Leukemia                            240    4.6     5.0 

       Bladder cancer                      162    2.2     N/A 

       Brain & other CNS cancer            145    3.2     N/A 

       Rectal cancer                       134    2.2     N/A 

       Malignant melanoma of skin           88    1.9     N/A 

     3 Cerebrovascular disease           1,719   21.0    27.7 

     4 Pneumonia & influenza             1,150   12.7    14.0 

     5 Chronic obstructive pulmonary     1,015   15.2    19.7 
       disease                                                

     6 Unintentional injuries              924   22.5    32.5 

       Motor vehicle accidents             412   12.2    18.5 

       Falls                               183    2.4     N/A 

       Drowning                             47    1.4     N/A 

       Residential fire                     29    0.8     N/A 

     7 Diabetes mellitus                   493    7.9    11.7 

     8 Septicemia                          434    6.2     4.1 

     9 Chronic liver disease &             306    6.9     8.6 
       cirrhosis                                              



Table 2-3 continues.

TABLE 2-3. (Continued.)


                                                    AAMRb     

Ranka  Cause of Death                       No.     CT      US 

    10 Nephritis, nephrotic syndrome,       298    4.3     4.3 
       & nephrosis                                             

    11 Suicide                              287    7.9    11.5 

    12 HIV Infection                        280    7.9     9.8 

    13 Atherosclerosis                      181    1.8     2.7 

    14 Homicide & legal intervention        174    5.5    10.2 



       ALL CAUSESc                       27,542  445.0   520.2 



a Based on number of deaths.

b AAMR = Age-adjusted mortality rate (direct method). See introduction to Section 2.2, Leading Causes of Death, for explanation.

c The number of deaths for all causes includes one case of unknown sex.

TABLE 2-4. Leading causes of death of male Connecticut residents in CY 1990, and age-adjusted mortality rates (AAMRs) for Connecticut (1) and the United States (2,3). All figures are based on primary cause of death.


                                                    AAMRb     

Ranka Cause of Death                       No.     CT      US 

     1 Diseases of the heart              4,626  182.9   206.7 

     2 All cancers                        3,503  149.0   166.3 

       Lung & other respiratory cancer    1,098   48.3    61.0 

       Lung cancer                        1,055   46.6     N/A 

       Prostate cancer                      430   15.5    16.7 

       Colon cancer                         339   13.6     N/A 

       Pancreatic cancer                    190    8.2     N/A 

       Leukemia                             126    5.7     6.4 

       Bladder cancer                       102    3.7     N/A 

       Brain & other CNS cancer              79    3.9     N/A 

       Rectal cancer                         63    2.8     N/A 

       Malignant melanoma of skin            48    2.3     N/A 

     3 Cerebrovascular disease              630   22.6    30.2 

     4 Unintentional injuries               596   33.7    47.7 

       Motor vehicle accidents              292   18.1    26.3 

       Falls                                 73    3.0     N/A 

       Drowning                              42    2.6     N/A 

       Residential fire                      19    1.1     N/A 

     5 Chronic obstructive pulmonary        537   20.2    27.2 
       disease                                                 

     6 Pneumonia & influenza                473   16.0    18.5 

     7 HIV Infection                        227   13.0    17.7 



Table 2-4 continues.

TABLE 2-4. (Continued.)


                                                    AAMRb     

Ranka  Cause of Death                       No.     CT      US 

     7 Suicide                              227   12.9    19.0 

     9 Diabetes mellitus                    195    8.2    12.3 

    10 Chronic liver disease &              192    9.8    12.2 
       cirrhosis                                               

    11 Septicemia                           187    7.3     4.9 

    12 Nephritis, nephrotic syndrome,       148    5.6     5.4 
       & nephrosis                                             

    13 Homicide & legal intervention        134    8.8    16.3 

    14 Atherosclerosis                       67    2.2     3.2 



       ALL CAUSES                        13,619  576.6   680.2 



a Based on number of deaths.

b AAMR = Age-adjusted mortality rate (direct method). See introduction to Section 2.2, Leading Causes of Death, for explanation.

TABLE 2-5. Leading causes of death of female Connecticut residents in CY 1990, and age-adjusted mortality rates (AAMRs) for Connecticut (1) and the United States (2,3). All figures are based on primary cause of death.


                                                    AAMRb     

Ranka Cause of Death                       No.     CT      US 

     1 Diseases of the heart              4,867   93.7   108.9 

     2 All cancers                        3,309  105.7   112.7 

       Lung & other respiratory cancer      704   25.0    26.2 

       Lung cancer                          684   24.3     N/A 

       Breast cancer                        604   21.3    23.1 

       Colon cancer                         358    9.4     N/A 

       Ovarian cancer                       170    5.9     N/A 

       Pancreatic cancer                    169    4.5     N/A 

       Leukemia                             114    3.8     3.9 

       Rectal cancer                         71    1.7     N/A 

       Brain & other CNS cancer              66    2.5     N/A 

       Bladder cancer                        60    1.4     N/A 

       Endometrial cancer                    42    1.3     N/A 

       Malignant melanoma of skin            40    1.6     N/A 

     3 Cerebrovascular disease            1,089   19.8    25.7 

     4 Pneumonia & influenza                677   10.7    11.0 

     5 Chronic obstructive pulmonary        478   12.2    14.7 
       disease                                                 

     6 Unintentional injuries               328   11.6    17.9 

       Motor vehicle accidents`             120    6.3    10.7 

       Falls                                110    1.8     N/A 

       Residential fire                      10    0.5     N/A 

       Drowning                               5    0.3     N/A 



Table 2-5 continues.

TABLE 2-5. (Continued.)


                                                    AAMRb     

Ranka  Cause of Death                       No.     CT      US 

     7 Diabetes mellitus                    298    7.5    11.1 

     8 Septicemia                           247    5.4     3.5 

     9 Nephritis, nephrotic syndrome,       150    3.6     3.6 
       & nephrosis                                             

    10 Chronic liver disease &              114    4.4     5.3 
       cirrhosis                                               

    10 Atherosclerosis                      114    1.5     2.4 

    12 Suicide                               60    3.2     4.5 

    13 HIV Infection                         53    3.0     2.1 

    14 Homicide & legal intervention         40    2.2     4.2 



       ALL CAUSES                        13,922  342.5   390.6 



a Based on number of deaths.

b AAMR = Age-adjusted mortality rate (direct method). See introduction to Section 2.2, Leading Causes of Death, for explanation.

OF NOTE

For decedents of both sexes in age group 1-4 years and in the five, 5-year age cohorts from 10-14 years to 30-34 years, the leading cause of death was "unintentional injuries."

For those in age group 5 to 9 years and in the four consecutive 10-year intervals from age 35 to 74 years, the leading cause of death was "malignant neoplasms."

The leading cause of death for both sexes aged 75 years and older was "diseases of the heart," specifically "ischemic heart disease."

Infection with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) was the fourth leading cause of death of males aged 20-24 years and the second leading cause for males aged 25-44 years and females aged 25-34 years.

REFERENCES

(1) Selenskas, S.L. In preparation. Connecticut age-adjusted mortality rates and age-adjusted years of potential life lost for selected causes of death in 1989, 1990, and 1991. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Health Research and Data Analysis, Hartford, CT.

(2) National Center for Health Statistics. 1993. Advance report of final mortality statistics, 1990. Monthly Vital Statistics Report 41(7 S). US Public Health Service, Hyattsville, MD.

(3) Health United States 1992, and healthy people 2000 review. 1993. National Center for Health Statistics, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, US Public Health Service, Hyattsville, MD. DHHS Publ. No. (PHS) 93-1232, 390 pp.

2.3 Fetal and Infant Deaths

Fetal death, commonly called "stillbirth," is defined as the death in utero (in the womb) of a fetus after 20 or more weeks of gestation. An infant death is that of an individual less than 1 year (365 days) of age. The total number of infant deaths equals the sum of neonatal and post-neonatal deaths. Neonatal deaths are those of infants less than 28 days old, and post-neonatal deaths are those of infants 28 to 364 days old.

TABLE 2-6. Numbers and rates of resident fetal, infant, neonatal, and post-neonatal deaths, broken out by race for Connecticut in CY 1990 (1). Figures for the United States (2,3,4) are included for comparison.


                                  CT               US       

Type of      Racea,            No. Rateb,c      No.   Rateb,c 
death                                                         

Fetal        All races         343     6.8     31,386     7.5 

             White             263     6.3     21,081     6.4 

             Black              70    11.3      9,201    13.3 

             Other               5     4.6      1,104     6.0 

             Unknown             5       -          0       - 



Infant       All races         398     7.9     38,351     9.2 

             White             266     6.4     24,883     7.6 

             Black             110    17.8     12,290    18.0 

             Other              11    10.1      1,178     6.4 

             Unknown            11       -          -       - 



Neonatal     All races         278     5.5     24,309     5.8 

             White             187     4.5     15,751     4.8 

             Black              74    11.9      7,905    11.6 

             Other               7     6.4        653     3.6 

             Unknown            10       -          -       - 



Post-neonata All races         120     2.4     14,042     3.4 
l                                                             

             White              79     1.9      9,132     2.8 

             Black              36     5.8      4,385     6.4 

             Other               4     3.7        525     2.9 

             Unknown             1       -          -       - 



a Fetal deaths are based on the mother's reported race. Infant, neonatal, and post-neonatal

deaths are based on the reported race of the infant.

b Rate is expressed as number per 1,000 live births. Live births are shown by race in

Table 2-2.

c In calculating the infant mortality rate, the numerator is the number of deaths based on the

infant's race, and the denominator is number of live births based on the mother's race. This

method has been used for national rates since 1989.

OF NOTE

The overall infant mortality rate for 1990, 7.9 deaths per 1,000 live births, was the lowest ever recorded and represented a decrease from the 1989 rate of 8.9 per 1,000.

The neonatal death rate (5.5/1,000) was also lower than the 1989 rate (6.5/1,000); however, the post-neonatal death rate was unchanged.

The infant mortality rate for blacks was 2.3 times the overall rate for all races and 2.8 times the rate for whites.

Seven towns (Bridgeport, Hartford, Meriden, New Britain, New Haven, Stamford, and Waterbury) had 10 or more resident infant deaths, representing 46% of the state total. Four towns (Bridgeport, Hartford, New Haven, and Stamford) together accounted for 27% of the fetal deaths in Connecticut.

Fourteen infants died of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), three of unintentional injuries, and three of homicide and purposely inflicted injury.

Eighty-two percent of total fetal deaths were associated with low birth weight (<2,500 grams or <5 lbs. 8 oz).

REFERENCES

(1) One hundred and forty-third registration report of births, marriages, divorces and deaths for the year ending December 31, 1990. 1994. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Office of Health Policy Development, Health Status Section, Hartford, CT. 92 pp. plus appendices.

(2) National Center for Health Statistics. 1993. Advance report of final mortality statistics, 1990. Monthly Vital Statistics Report 41(7 S). US Public Health Service, Hyattsville, MD.

(3) Health United States 1992, and healthy people 2000 review. 1993. National Center for Health Statistics, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, US Public Health Service, Hyattsville, MD. DHHS Publ. No. (PHS) 93-1232. 390 pp.

(4) National Center for Health Statistics. 1994. Vital statistics of the United States, 1990, vol. II, Mortality, Part A. US Public Health Service, Washington DC, DHHS Publ. No. (PHS) 95-1101.

2.4 Legal Induced Abortions

According to the Connecticut Public Health Code every induced abortion performed within the state must be reported within 7 days to the Commissioner of Health Services by the physician who performed the procedure. The reports include the date and place where the procedure took place, the method, the physician's estimate of gestational age at the time of abortion, and the patient's age and state of residence. No other patient identifiers are reported.

TABLE 2-7. Types of facilities at which legal induced abortions

were performed in Connecticut during CY 1991 (1). All procedures

were performed by curettage.a


                                 Abortions       

Facility type                   Number    Percent 

Physician's office               4,088      22.1% 

Non-hospital clinic             12,632      68.2% 

Hospital (inpatient or           1,814       9.8% 
outpatient)                                       

Total                           18,534       100% 



a The method of abortion was not reported for one case.

TABLE 2-8 States of residencea of women who received legal

induced legal abortions in Connecticut during CY 1991(1).


                                 Abortions       

State                           Number    Percent 

Connecticut                     17,689      95.4% 

Massachusetts                      506       2.7% 

New York                           151       0.8% 

Rhode Island                       131       0.7% 

Other state or nation               57       0.3% 

Total                           18,534       100% 



a Induced abortion statistics are not available by patient's town of residence.

TABLE 2-9. Ages of women who received legal

induced abortions in Connecticut during CY 1991 (1).


                     Abortions      

Age (years)        Number    Percent 

19 or less          3,972      21.7% 

20-34              12,990      70.8% 

35 or greater       1,379       7.5% 

TOTALa             18,341       100% 



a Total excludes 193 cases where patient's age was not reported.

TABLE 2-10. Numbers of women under

the age of 20 years who received legal induced

abortions in Connecticut during CY 1991 (1).


              Abortions      

Age           Number  Percent 
(years)                       

12 or              0       0% 
less                          

13                12     0.3% 

14                90     2.3% 

15               233     5.9% 

16               545    13.7% 

17               853    21.5% 

18               991    24.9% 

19             1,248    31.4% 

TOTAL          3,972     100% 



TABLE 2-11. Physician's estimate of gestational

age (GA) at time of abortion for legal induced abortions

performed in Connecticut during CY 1991 (1).


                     Abortions      

GA (weeks)         Number    Percent 

<13                17,010      92.4% 

13-15               1,167       6.3% 

16-20                 221       1.2% 

21+                    15       0.1% 

TOTALa             18,413       100% 



a Total excludes 121 cases where gestational age was not reported.

All 121 procedures were done by curettage, however, indicating that the

abortions occurred early in the pregnancies.

REFERENCE

(1) Statistical summary of legal induced abortions occurring in Connecticut during calendar year 1991. 1994. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Community Health and State-operated Treatment Facilities, Division of Planning, Development, and Information, Hartford, CT,

2 pp.
 


3 RISK FACTORS

Infant and Maternal Health Indicators

Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System

Connecticut Health Check: Health Risk Appraisal for Youth
 


3.1 Infant and Maternal Health Indicators

Birth weight, adequacy of prenatal care, and births to teenage mothers are considered important measures of increased risk of infant death. Low birth weight is related to several preventable risk factors, including lack of prenatal care, maternal smoking, maternal use of alcohol and other drugs, and maternal age (especially when less than

18 years).

TABLE 3-1. Infant and maternal health indicators by mother's race and

Hispanic ethnicity for Connecticut resident births in CY 1990 (1).


                                                 CT     

Mother's race                        
Indicator           and ethnicitya         No.       %d  

Low birth weight    All races            3,294       6.6 

(<2,500 g or <5     White                2,319       5.6 
lbs 8 oz)                                                

                    Black                  812      13.1 

                    Other                   64       5.9 

                    Unknown                 99       7.6 

                    Hispanic               474       8.9 
                    ethnicity                            



Very low            All races              671       1.3 

birth weight        White                  442       1.1 

(<1,500 g or <3     Black                  194       3.1 
lbs 5 oz)                                                

                    Other                   10       0.9 

                    Unknown                 25       1.9 

                    Hispanic                98       1.9 
                    ethnicity                            



Late or no          All races            6,590      15.1 
prenatal careb                                           

                    White                4,478      12.1 

                    Black                1,759      35.0 

                    Other                  156      16.9 

                    Unknown                197      26.4 

                    Hispanic             1,242      29.4 
                    ethnicity                            



Non-adequate        All races            8,549      20.7 

prenatal carec      White                5,988      17.1 

                    Black                2,113      45.2 

                    Other                  211      23.8 

                    Unknown                237      36.1 

                    Hispanic             1,637      42.6 
                    ethnicity                            



Table 3-1 continues.

TABLE 3-1. (Continued.)


                                                  CT     

Mother's race                         
Indicator           and ethnicitya           No.      %d  

Teen births         All races                 93      0.2 
(mother's age)                                            

     < 15 years     White                     42      0.1 

                    Black                     46      0.7 

                    Other                      -        - 

                    Unknown                    5      0.4 

                    Hispanic ethnicity        35      0.7 



     < 18 yrs       All races              1,607      3.2 

                    White                    950      2.3 

                    Black                    550      8.9 

                    Other                     21      1.9 

                    Unknown                   86      6.6 

                    Hispanic ethnicity       542     10.2 



     < 20 yrs       All races              4,121      8.2 

                    White                  2,601      6.3 

                    Black                  1,246     20.1 

                    Other                     69      6.3 

                    Unknown                  205     15.7 

                    Hispanic ethnicity     1,198     22.6 



a Race consists of four mutually exclusive groups (white, black, other, unknown).

b Late prenatal care is defined as prenatal care beginning in the second or third trimester of

pregnancy. This category includes 203 births to women who received no prenatal care (4).

c Adequacy of prenatal care is defined by the timing of the first prenatal visit and subsequent

number of visits, using a modified Kessner Index (2,3). This indicator is associated with risk

of low birth weight.

d Percentages are based on number of births for each racial or ethnic group.

OF NOTE

The largest infant born to a Connecticut resident in 1990 weighed 6,835 grams or just over 15 pounds. The youngest mother was 12 years old, and the oldest was 58 (4).

In 1990 17 births occurred after more than 50 weeks of gestation (4).

REFERENCES

(1) One hundred and forty-third registration report of births, marriages, divorces and deaths for the year ending December 31, 1990. 1994. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Office of Health Policy Development, Health Status Section, Hartford, CT. 92 pp. plus appendices.

(2) Kessner, D.M., J. Singer, C.E. Kalk, and E.R. Schlesinger. 1973. Infant death: an analysis by maternal risk and health care. Contrasts in health status, vol. 1. Institute of Medicine, National Academy of Sciences, Washington, DC.

(3) Modified Kessner index. 1991. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Health Surveillance and Planning Division, Hartford, CT.

(4) Unpublished birth records, 1990. State of Connecticut, Office of Strategic Planning and Information Services, Vital Records, Hartford, CT.

3.2 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System

The Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) is a state-based telephone survey of randomly selected adults age 18 and older. The survey is conducted in cooperation with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta. The BRFSS was first conducted in CT by the DPHAS Division of Chronic Disease and Injury Prevention in 1985 and then continuously since 1988.

In 1993, 49 states (all except Wyoming) plus the District of Columbia participated in the system; 1,810 Connecticut adults were interviewed by a survey firm under contract with DPHAS and funded by the CDC. The data presented below are the results for 1993, adjusted to be representative of Connecticut's adult population.

TABLE 3-2. Percent of adults who self-reported the following health-related characteristics. Data from 1993 BRFSS report (1).


                         Connecticut          United States  

All       All   HP2000  
Characteristic         Male  Female  adults    adultsk targetl  


Current smokinga       21.9    19.5    20.6       22.5    15    

Overweightb            25.3    18.6    21.8       25.5    20    

Safety belt            35.8    24.5    29.9       36.3    15    
non-usec                                                        

Chronic drinkingd       5.9     1.0     3.3        3.0    -     

Acute drinkinge        21.3     7.8    14.2       14.2    -     

Drink and drivef        5.7     0.5     3.0        2.4    -     

Diabetesg               5.6     4.9     5.2        4.5    -     

No health insurance    12.2     6.8     9.4       12.9    -     

Cholesterol            68.2    72.3    70.3       65.0    75    
screenedh                                                       

Mammogram/breast        N/A    77.2     N/A       73.4    80    
exam i                                                          

Pap testj               N/A    88.9     N/A       93.7    95    



a Current smoking = respondents who report ever smoking 100 cigarettes and who smoke now (regularly or irregularly).

b Overweight = females with body mass index (weight in kilograms divided by height in meters squared) equal to or more than 27.3, and males with body mass index equal to or greater than 27.8.

c Does not always wear a safety belt.

d Average of 60 or more alcoholic drinks per month.

e "Binge" drinking, or five or more drinks on an occasion, one or more times in the past month.

f Have driven after having too much to drink, one or more times in the past month.

g Told by a doctor they have diabetes.

h Had blood cholesterol checked within the past 5 years.

i Women age 40 and older who report they have ever had a mammogram and clinical breast exam.

j Women with intact uterine cervix who report they have ever had a pap smear test. Students, women who had never married, and 18-24 year olds were among the least likely to have been tested (63.1%, 67.6%, and 61.0%, respectively).

k The figures in this column represent the median values for the 50 participants (49 states plus District of Columbia) in the survey.

l Healthy People 2000 (2) is a national initiative to improve the health of all Americans through prevention. It is driven by 384 specific objectives for promoting health and preventing disease, with the year 2000 as the target for achievement.

Estimated Smoking-attributable Mortality

Computer software distributed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention was used to estimate Connecticut mortality attributable to smoking. Calculations were based on deaths and BRFSS smoking data for the same year and relative risks for smoking-related diseases from major prospective studies.

TABLE 3-3. Estimated smoking-attributable mortality for males and females in Connecticut, and years of potential life losta (3).


                  Smoking-attributable                     
deaths                             

Sex             Number       % of total     Average YPLLa  
deaths                      

Male                3,420             24.2%           11.6 

Female              2,028             14.5%           12.8 

Both sexes          5,448             19.4%           12.0 



a Average years of potential life lost (YPLL), for people who die prematurely of smoking-related

causes, is the estimated average number of years of life that they lose, measured to life expectancy.

OF NOTE

Hysterectomy. About one in three women age 45 and older, and 16.5% of women age 18 and older, reported they had a hysterectomy.

Health Care Access and Coverage. 12.2% of men and 6.8% of women reported they did not have any kind of health care coverage, and 12.1% said they could not see a doctor on at least one occasion in the last year, due to financial constraints.

AIDS. 85.3% of respondents 18-64 years old felt their chances of getting the AIDS virus were low to none; however, 21.5% reported they had their blood tested for the AIDS virus.

Safe Sex. 91.4% of respondents 18 to 64 years old said that if they had a sexually active teenager, they would encourage him or her to use a condom.

Smoking. 72% of current smokers reported they would like to stop smoking.

Child Safety Belt Use. 91% of respondents with children between the ages of 5 and 14 reported that the oldest child under 15 always or nearly always used a safety belt.

Pet Ownership. Three in 10 adults said they owned at least one dog, and another 3 in 10 reported owning one or more cats; 12% of respondents owned both cats and dogs.

REFERENCES

(1) Behavioral risk factor surveillance system: Connecticut statewide survey data, 1993. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Division of Chronic Disease and Injury Prevention, Surveillance and Evaluation Unit, Hartford, CT.

(2) Healthy people 2000: National health promotion and disease prevention objectives. 1991. US Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service. DHHS Publ. No. (PHS) 91-50213. 154 pp.

(3) Adams, M.L. 1994. The public health impact and economic cost of smoking in Connecticut - 1989. Connecticut Medicine 58: 194-198.

3.3 CT Health Check: Health Risk Appraisal for Youth

Connecticut Health Check is a computerized health risk appraisal developed by the DPHAS Division of Chronic Disease and Injury Prevention; it has been promoted as a motivational and educational tool for youth since 1985. The Health Check questionnaire covers a broad range of health issues including exercise, alcohol consumption, nutrition, tobacco and illegal drug use, AIDS, stress, and seatbelt use. Separate versions of the questionnaire are available for grades 4-5, 6-8, and 9-12. As of June, 1994, approximately 53,000 students had participated in the Health Check, including 5,100 youths in 27 schools, who took part during the 1993-1994 school year (September, 1993-June, 1994).

The Health Check questionnaires are offered to schools on a first come, first served basis, and often are used in conjunction with health education classes. Students record their answers on computer cards, the cards are optically scanned, and a report highlighting risk areas and offering suggestions for improvement is generated immediately for each individual, thus giving the students useful and timely feedback. Both the cards and the print-outs are anonymous and confidential.

Because schools are self-selected for participation in Health Check, results are not necessarily representative of all students in Connecticut. They do, however, provide some measure of behavioral risk factors in youth, in the absence of more representative surveys. Some results of the 1993-1994 Health Check are shown below. Tabular data for 4th and 5th graders are not included because of the small number of participants.

TABLE 3-4. Percent of male students in grades 9-12 who self-reported certain behaviors in the Connecticut Health Check during the 1993-1994 school year (1).


                                 Grade level (Males)       

9        10      11      12    
Health risk appraisal item  (n=724)  (n=605)  (n=226) (n=175) 


Eat breakfast <3 times a          24       23      34      27 
week                                                          

Eat junk food daily               40       35      37      44 

Exercise <3 times a week          20       21      16      27 

Smoke cigarettes                  19       22      24      26 

Drink alcohol                     51       56      65      73 

Drink alcohol weekly              10        9      16      24 

Use marijuana currently           10       15      17      25 

Have tried/currently use           5        3       4       9 
cocaine                                                       

Were in physical fight            49       45      42      45 
within last year                                              

Have access to a gun at           35       32      40      35 
home                                                          

Are currently depressed            8        7       9       7 

Attempted suicide within           1        1       1       2 
past year                                                     

Feel it is OK to have sex         60       63      75      76 
at their age                                                  



TABLE 3-5. Percent of female students in grades 9-12 who self-reported certain behaviors in the Connecticut Health Check during the 1993-1994 school year (1).


                                 Grade level (Females)     

9      10       11      12    
Health risk appraisal item   (n=664) (n=482) (n=196)  (n=177) 


Eat breakfast <3 times a          42      33       40      46 
week                                                          

Eat junk food daily               35      27       24      24 

Exercise <3 times a week          41      33       43      56 

Smoke cigarettes                  21      24       28      32 

Drink alcohol                     51      59       62      76 

Drink alcohol weekly               5       5        6       7 

Use marijuana currently            7      11       12      15 

Have tried/currently use           3       2        1       5 
cocaine                                                       

Were in physical fight            33      23       20      28 
within last year                                              

Have access to a gun at           23      21       24      21 
home                                                          

Are currently depressed           14      16       17      14 

Attempted suicide within           3       2        4       2 
past year                                                     

Feel it is OK to have sex         42      48       53      67 
at their age                                                  



TABLE 3-6. Percent of male students in grades 6, 7, and 8 who self-reported certain behaviors in the Connecticut Health Check during the 1993-1994 school year (1).


                                 Grade level (Males)       

6          7          8      

Health risk appraisal        (n=335)    (n=285)    (n=148)   
item                                                         

Eat breakfast <3 times a            16        19          21 
week                                                         

Eat junk food daily                 27        35          34 

Smoke cigarettes                     1         5           5 

Drink alcohol                       31        56          51 

Drink alcohol weekly                 1         9           7 

Use marijuana currently              1         3           3 

Have tried/currently use             1         2           5 
cocaine                                                      

Were in physical fight              69        72          72 
w/in last year                                               

Have access to a gun at             22        37          50 
home                                                         

Are currently depressed              9        10          11 

Attempted suicide within             1         2           4 
past year                                                    



TABLE 3-7. Percent of female students in grades 6, ,7 and 8 who self-reported certain behaviors in the Connecticut Health Check during the 1993-1994 school year (1).


                                Grade level (Females)      

6          7          8      

Health risk appraisal        (n=322)    (n=282)    (n=161)   
item                                                         

Eat breakfast <3 times a            25         26         26 
week                                                         

Eat junk food daily                 28         28         32 

Smoke cigarettes                     1          2          9 

Drink alcohol                       25         46         47 

Drink alcohol weekly                 2          2          3 

Use marijuana currently              1          1          4 

Have tried/currently use             1          1          2 
cocaine                                                      

Were in physical fight              45         48         42 
w/in last year                                               

Have access to a gun at             15         21         26 
home                                                         

Are currently depressed             11         14         12 

Attempted suicide within             1          0          4 
past year                                                    



OF NOTE

Thirty-seven percent of the students in grades 6-12 reported they do not live with both of their natural parents; 18-19% live with a single parent.

Fourteen percent of the teen participants had not visited a dentist or dental clinic in the past year.

Nearly half (48%) of the 190 elementary school participants (mostly 5th graders) reported getting most of their information about health at school, compared to 38% from their parents.

Of the elementary school students who ride bicycles, 40% reported they do not wear bicycle helmets.

Thirty-five percent of the elementary school students said they watch 3 or more hours of television daily.

Twenty-five percent of the elementary school students think they might smoke when they're older.

REFERENCE

(1) Connecticut health check results: School year 1993-1994. 1994. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Division of Chronic Disease and Injury Prevention, Surveillance and Evaluation Unit, Hartford, CT, 30 pp.
 


4 INFECTIOUS DISEASES

Reportable Diseases

Rabies and Other Zoonoses

Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS)

Sexually Transmitted Diseases

Tuberculosis Prevention and Control
 


4.1 Reportable Diseases

The Commissioner of the DPHAS is required to declare an annual list of reportable diseases. Each report filed with DPHAS and with local health departments contains the identities of the reporting and attending health care providers, the disease being reported, and the name, race, ethnicity, sex, address, and occupation of the person affected. The directors of all clinical laboratories in Connecticut also must report laboratory findings suggestive of specified diseases relating to public health; these reports supplement those of the health care providers.

TABLE 4-1. Cases of selected diseases (excluding zoonoses) reportable to the DPHAS Epidemiology Section during CY 1993, and average annual numbers and ranges of cases for the prior 5 yearsa (1).


                           CY 1993             1988-1992       

Total           Avg. no.    Range of   
Disease                   cases  Rateb    cases/yr    cases/yr   


AIDSc                      1,731  52.8          467   323-690    

Brucellosis                    0                 <1     0-1      

Gonorrheac                 4,658 142.1        8,368 5,669-11,014 

Haemophilis influenzae,        9   0.3           34    12-58     
type B                                                           

Hansen's disease               0                 <1     0-1      
(Leprosy)                                                        

Hepatitis A                  117   3.6          181    81-243    

Hepatitis B                   75   2.3          212   158-251    

Leptospirosis                  0                 <1     0-1      

Malaria                       30   0.9           21    13-29     

Measles                        9   0.3           95    6-229     

Meningococcal disease         33   1.0           45    29-65     

Mumps                          8   0.2           12     8-17     

Pertussis (Whooping          102   3.1           31    22-50     
cough)                                                           

Rheumatic fever                1  0.03            2     0-4      

Rubella (German                0                  1     1-3      
measles)                                                         

Salmonellosis                811  24.7          995  726-1,213   

Shigellosis                  245   7.5          206   133-336    

Syphilis (primary and        158   4.8          690  257-1,139   
secondary)c                                                      

Tetanus                        0                 <1     1-1      

Tuberculosisc                155   4.7          154   141-164    

Typhoid fever                  6   0.2            6     2-9      

Yersiniosis                   14   0.4           18     2-26     



a Reportable diseases for which there were no reported cases in Connecticut in 1993 or the prior

5 years are not included. Diseases transmitted by animals are discussed below in Section 4.2,

Rabies and Other Zoonoses. Occupational diseases are discussed in Section 8.4, Occupational

Health Surveillance.

b Crude incidence rate, or reported cases per 100,000 population (not adjusted), based on 1993 CT population estimate of 3,277,310 (2).

c For further information, see Sections 4.3 (AIDS), 4.4 (Sexually Transmitted Diseases), and 4.5

(Tuberculosis Prevention and Control).

4.2 Rabies and Other Zoonoses

A zoonosis is an infection or infectious disease transmissible under natural conditions from vertebrate animals to man. The following zoonoses were reportable in Connecticut in 1993: babesiosis, cat-scratch disease, eastern equine encephalitis, Lyme disease, plague, psittacosis, rabies, and Rocky Mountain spotted fever.

Rabies and Lyme disease are the two most important zoonoses in Connecticut. Rabies is caused by a virus and is spread when the virus-laden saliva of an infected, warm-blooded animal is introduced by a bite or scratch. Lyme disease, caused by a spirochete bacterium, is transmitted by ticks.

TABLE 4-2. Cases of selected reportable zoonoses (diseases transmissible under natural conditions from vertebrate animals to humans) reported in Connecticut during CY 1993, and average numbers and ranges of cases for the prior 5 yearsa (1). All cases except those for rabies were reported in humans.


                                             1988-1992       

Total        Avg. no.    Range of   
Disease                   cases  Rateb   cases     cases/yr   


Babesiosis                     8   0.2        14     3-25     

Cat-scratch diseasec         131   4.0       N/A     N/A      

Lyme disease               1,350  41.2     1,032  704-1,760   

Psittacosis                    0   N/A         2     0-6      

Rabies (animal)              780   N/A       211    3-838     

Rocky Mountain spotted         0   N/A         2     1-4      
fever                                                         



a Reportable diseases for which there were no reported cases in Connecticut in 1993 or the prior

5 years are not included.

b Crude incidence rate, or reported cases per 100,000 population (not adjusted), based on 1993 CT population estimate of 3,277,310 (2).

c Cat-scratch disease, associated with cat scratches or bites, has been reportable in CT since 1992,

during which year 111 cases were reported. The most common symptoms of the disease are

swollen glands, skin lesions, malaise, and fever.

TABLE 4-3. Spread of the raccoon strain of rabies, by

county and calendar year, across Connecticut since

its introduction in March, 1991a (1).


                   Cases by calendar  
year         

County               1991   1992   1993 

Fairfield             194    384     40 

Hartford                2    109    236 

Litchfield              1    174    119 

Middlesex               0      9    105 

New Haven               0    157    229 

New London              1      1      0 

Tolland                 1      3     50 

Windham                 1      1      1 

TOTAL                 200    838    780 



a All cases occurred in animals. There were no cases of human rabies in

Connecticut, and only three cases in the US, during 1993.

TABLE 4-4. Reported numbers of animals with rabies

in Connecticut in CY 1993, showing the extent to which the

rabies epizootic has affected other animal species. With the

exception of bats, all cases are due to the raccoon straina (1).


                        Cases        

Animal             Number    Percent  

Raccoon                 662     84.9% 

Skunk                    75      9.6% 

Bat                      16      2.0% 

Cat                      11      1.4% 

Woodchuck                 6      0.8% 

Fox                       4      0.5% 

Horse                     2      0.3% 

Dog                       2      0.3% 

Cow                       1      0.1% 

Sheep                     1      0.1% 

TOTAL                   780      100% 



a An epizootic of raccoon rabies reached Connecticut in March, 1991 (4).

There were 9,377 cases of animal rabies nationwide in 1993 (3).

TABLE 4-5. Geographic distribution of Lyme

disease in Connecticut during CY 1993 (1).


                        Cases        

County             Number     Ratea   

Fairfield               258        31 

Hartford                 73         9 

Litchfield               38        22 

Middlesex               265       183 

New Haven               148        18 

New London              291       117 

Tolland                 112        86 

Windham                 100        97 

Unknown                  65         - 

TOTAL                 1,350        41 



a Crude incidence rate, or reported cases per 100,000 population (not adjusted), based on 1993 county and state population

estimates for Connecticut (2).

OF NOTE

In 1993, the total numbers of reported measles and mumps cases were the lowest ever recorded in the US, whereas pertussis reached the highest annual level since 1967 (4).

The last case of smallpox in the US occurred in 1949 (4).

Although Lyme disease is spread by tick bites, transmission does not occur until after the tick has fed for several hours (5).

REFERENCES

(1) Summary data for CY 1993. Department record. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Health Promotion and Disease Prevention, Epidemiology Section, Epidemiology Program, Hartford, CT.

(2) Estimated populations in Connecticut as of July 1, 1993. 1994. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Office of Strategic Planning and Information Services, Health Research and Data Analysis Unit, Hartford, CT.

(3) Summary data for CY 1993. Department record. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Health Promotion and Disease Prevention, Environmental Epidemiology and Occupational Health Division, Occupational Health Program, Hartford, CT.

(4) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 1994. Summary of notifiable diseases, United States, 1993. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report

42(53): 1-73.

(5) Benenson, A.S., Editor. 1990. Control of communicable diseases in man. American Public Health Association, Washington, DC. 532 pp.

4.3 Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS)

Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS), first described in 1981, is the end stage of long-term infection with Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV). AIDS, as defined by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, is a reportable condition in all 50 states and US territories, and HIV infection is reportable in 35 states. In Connecticut, both HIV infection and AIDS are reportable for children less than 13 years of age, whereas only AIDS is reportable for those over 12 years of age.

The AIDS Division of DPHAS has several functions, most of which are carried out through contracts with local agencies. 1) It conducts AIDS surveillance and seroprevalence studies to determine the number of AIDS cases, the incidence of HIV infection in certain populations, and the distribution of the disease in CT. 2) It sponsors individual-, group-, and community-level activities to reduce risky sex and drug behaviors and to create community support for safer behaviors. 3) It funds HIV counseling and testing for more than 20,000 people at risk annually, with referral of those who test positive for treatment and counseling. 4) It funds and supports needle-exchange programs in six cities, where injection drug users trade their used needles for clean ones. 5) It provides financial and technical support for health care and social services for people with HIV and their families. 6) It provides training for outreach workers, educators, counselors, case managers, and supervisors of AIDS staff.

TABLE 4-6. Cumulative total cases of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome in males and females in Connecticut (1) and the United States (2) reported from January 1, 1980 (the first case of AIDS in CT was diagnosed in 1980) through December 31, 1993, by age, race/ethnicity, and transmission category.


                    Connecticut              United States    

Group                                                           
Male       Female        Male         Female    

characteris     No.     %     No.    %      No.     %     No.     % 
tic                                                                 

Age                                                                 
(years)                                                             

<13              60     2      51    5    2,747     1   2,481     5 

13-19             6     -      10    1    1,070     -     484     1 

20-29           558    15     267   25   57,477    18  11,006    23 

30-39         1,765    47     502   46  143,788    46  20,698    44 

40-49           984    26     182   17   77,121    25   8,029    17 

50+             410    11      71    7   32,121    10   4,139     9 

Race/Ethnic                                                         
itya                                                                

White         1,596    42     303   28  169,080    54  11,050    25 

Black         1,419    37     536   49   88,192    28  23,810    54 

Hispanic        745    20     238   22   50,942    16   9,066    20 

Other/Unkno      23     1       6    1    3,364     1     431     1 
wn                                                                  





Table 4-6 continues.

TABLE 4-6. (Continued.)


                    Connecticut              United States    

Group                                                           
Male       Female        Male         Female    

characteris     No.     %     No.    %              %             % 
tic                                      No.            No.         

Transmissio                                                         
n                                                                   
categoryb                                                           

Ho/Bi male    1,407    37     N/A  N/A  193,652    62               

IDU           1,715    45     595   55   65,512    21  21,746    46 

Ho/Bi  &        195     5     N/A  N/A   23,360     7               
IDU                                                                 

Hemophiliac      34     1       1    -    3,058     1      75     - 

Heterosexua     144     4     323   31    7,679     2  15,487    33 
l                                                                   

Transfusion      28     1      27    2    3,660     1   2,521     5 

Pediatric       200     5      77    7    2,747     -   2,481     5 

Unknown          60     2      51    5   14,657     5   4,528     9 

TOTALd        3,783   100   1,083  100 314,325c   100 46,838c   100 




a US data on pediatric cases not available by race/ethnicity.

b Ho/Bi = homosexual or bisexual male; IDU = injection drug user; Ho/Bi & IDU = males who are both injection drug users and homo- or bisexual; Hemophiliac = adult hemophiliac; Pediatric =<13 years.

c US totals include one male and one female whose ages were unknown.

d Percents may not add up to 100%, because of rounding.

TABLE 4-7. Cumulative cases of AIDS in Connecticut from January 1, 1980a through December 31, 1993, by county and town of residenceb (1).


County/Town            No. cases    Percent   

New Haven County            1,610        33.1 

New Haven                     951        19.5 

Waterbury                     200         4.1 

West Haven                     93         1.9 

Meriden                        68         1.4 

Fairfield County            1,248        25.6 

Bridgeport                    459         9.4 

Stamford                      275         5.7 

Norwalk                       150         3.0 

Danbury                        95         2.0 

Greenwich                      54         1.1 

Hartford County             1,444        29.7 

Hartford                      965        19.7 

New Britain                   115         2.3 

East Hartford                  51         1.0 

New London County             255         5.2 

New London                     98         2.0 

Norwich                        58         1.2 

Middlesex County               86         1.8 

Litchfield County              64         1.3 

Tolland County                 61         1.3 

Windham County                 51         1.0 

County Unknown                 47         1.0 



a The first case of AIDS in Connecticut was diagnosed in 1980.

b Only towns with more than 50 reported cases are listed.

TABLE 4-8. Estimated numbers of HIV-infected adolescents and adults in Connecticut as of December 31, 1993, by sex, race/ethnicity, and transmission categorya,b. Numbers are rounded to the nearest 10 (1).


                               Sex                     

Group                     Male  Female       Total      
characteristic                                          

Race/Ethnicity                                          

White              3,740-4,990       840    4,580-5,830 

Black              2,220-4,290     1,420    3,640-5,710 

Hispanic           1,740-2,320       640    2,380-2,960 

Transmission                                            
categoryc                                               

Ho/Bi male         3,300-4,400       N/A    3,300-4,400 

IDU                4,000-5,440     1,680    5,680-7,120 

Heterosexual           350-460       930    1,280-1,390 

Other              1,040-1,390       290    1,330-1,680 

TOTAL              8,700-11,60     2,900  11,600-14,500 
                             0                          



a Additionally, an estimated 217 to 313 Connecticut children under age 13 (born through

March 31, 1993) are infected with HIV.

b Estimates for females are based on a sero-survey of childbearing women; data for males

are extrapolated from the values for females, assuming that the number of HIV-infected

males is three to four times that of infected women (1).

the female estimates.

c Ho/Bi male = homosexual or bisexual male; IDU = injection drug user.

OF NOTE

Worldwide in 1993, more than 15 million people, including one million children, were estimated to be infected with AIDS.

In 1993, AIDS became the leading killer of 25- to 44-year-old Americans, surpassing heart disease, cancer, homicide, and suicide.

As of December 31, 1993, almost half of all people reported with AIDS in Connecticut--2,327 adults and 47 children--had already died.

Between 1990 and 1993, the rate of AIDS in CT nearly doubled, from 16.3 to 29.5 per 100,000 population.

Three out of every 1,000 childbearing women in Connecticut were infected with HIV in 1993, and about one-third of CT women with AIDS became infected through heterosexual contact with a person with HIV infection or AIDS.

Although AIDS cases have been reported from 149 of CT's 169 towns, half of all reported cases were among residents of Hartford, New Haven, and Bridgeport.

In a recent survey, 72 % of CT respondents aged 18-64 years indicated they would be willing to work with a person infected with the AIDS virus, and 66% said they would allow their child to be in the same class with a child infected with the AIDS virus (3).

REFERENCES

(1) AIDS in Connecticut. Annual surveillance report, December 31, 1993. 1994. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Health Promotion, AIDS Division. Hartford, CT. 84 pp.

(2) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 1993. HIV/AIDS surveillance report 5(4).

(3) Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, Connecticut Statewide Survey Data, 1993. 1994. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Division of Chronic Disease and Injury Prevention, Hartford, CT.

4.4 Sexually Transmitted Diseases (STDs)

The goal of the STD Control Program at DPHAS is to reduce and prevent sexually transmitted diseases through appropriate treatment, education, and epidemiologic follow-up of the population at risk, thereby reducing the costly, debilitating, and life threatening consequences of the diseases. Five diseases (gonorrhea, syphilis, chlamydia, neonatal herpes, and chancroid) currently are reportable.

The incidence rates of gonorrhea and early syphilis are declining and are similar to rates seen more than 20 years ago. Chlamydia, which became reportable in 1990, is also beginning to decline. The reasons for these decreases are not clear. While some population groups may have adopted safer sex behaviors, other groups (e.g. teens, urban minority groups) continue to have disproportionately high rates of STDs.

TABLE 4-9. Gonorrhea cases, rates, and changes in rates by

age in Connecticut for CY 1993 (1).


Age             No.     % of           Change 
(years)       cases    total  Ratea  in rateb 

0-9              19      0.4      4     - 33% 

10-14           102      2.2     53     + 47% 

15-19         1,201     25.8    569      - 9% 

20-24         1,243     26.7    495     - 21% 

25-29           801     17.2    279     - 25% 

30-34           537     11.5    182     - 12% 

35+             645     13.8     48     - 19% 

TOTALc        4,658      100    142     - 18% 



a Cases per 100,000 population.

b Change in rate from CY 1992 to CY 1993.

c Total includes 110 cases where age was not reported.

TABLE 4-10. Chlamydia cases, rates, and changes in rates by

age in Connecticut for CY 1993 (1).


Age                     % of            Change 
(years)         No.    total   Ratea  in rateb 
cases                            

0-9              52      0.7      12     - 25% 

10-14           241      3.2     124      + 7% 

15-19         2,771     36.4   1,314      - 1% 

20-24         2,353     30.9     938     - 16% 

25-29         1,008     13.2     351     - 23% 

30-34           500      6.6     169     - 14% 

35+             371      4.9      28     - 32% 

TOTALc        7,610      100     232     - 13% 



a Cases per 100,000 population.

b Change in rate from CY 1992 to CY 1993.

c Total includes 314 cases where age was not reported.

TABLE 4-11. Primary and secondary syphilisa cases by race/ethnicityb

in Connecticut and selected cities during CY 1993 (1).


                         Race/Ethnicity            

Black     White   Hispanic  Totalc,d  


State/City      No.    %   No.    %   No.   %   No.     % 

Connecticut     128   81    13    8    15   9   158   100 

Bridgeport       29   81     0    0     7  19    36   100 

Hartford         27   75     3    8     5  14    36   100 

New Haven        52   98     0    0     1   2    53   100 



a Type of syphilis depends on stage of disease at diagnosis. Primary syphilis is

characterized by a painless lesion or chancre; secondary syphilis is characterized

by an eruption involving skin or mucous membranes.

b The race/ethnicity categories black, white, and Hispanic are mutually exclusive.

c Totals include two cases (one in Hartford) where race/ethnicity was not reported as

black, white, or Hispanic.

d Percents may not total 100, because of rounding.

OF NOTE

Syphilis. CY 1993 was the fourth consecutive year that primary and secondary

(P & S) syphilis incidence decreased, dropping 86% since 1989. Congenital syphilis declined from 27 cases in CY 1990 to 10 cases in CY 1993. P & S cases declined 75% and 71% in whites and Hispanics, respectively, but only by 17% in blacks. Blacks accounted for 81% of the reported cases, and had a case rate nine times the state's overall rate.

Gonorrhea. The lowest annual total of gonorrhea cases in 25 years was reported in CY 1993. Residents of Bridgeport, New Haven, and Hartford accounted for 58% of the cases, and Hartford alone for 27%. Although rates among adolescents aged 15-19 continued to decline, this age group accounted for 26% of the cases. The rate for adolescents was higher than for all other age groups, and was four times the overall state rate. Blacks accounted for 75% of reported cases, and rates for black adolescents were 25 times higher than for white adolescents.

Chlamydia. Reported cases of chlamydia, the most frequently reported STD, dropped 13% during CY 1993; 46% of all cases were in residents of Hartford, Bridgeport, and New Haven. Eighty-nine percent of all cases were in women, probably because health providers screen women for chlamydia routinely, whereas relatively few men are tested. The rates in black and Hispanic females in the 15-19 year age group were 14 and 7 times greater, respectively, than for white females.

REFERENCE

(1) Sexually transmitted diseases: 1993 surveillance summary. 1994. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Health Promotion and Disease Prevention, Division of Infectious Disease Surveillance and Control, Sexually Transmitted Disease Control Program, Hartford, CT.

4.5 Tuberculosis Prevention and Control

Tuberculosis (TB) is a disease caused by the bacterium Mycobacterium tuberculosis; it is transmitted when a person with the active disease coughs or expels small, bacteria-laden droplets into the air. Of those who become infected with M. tuberculosis, only about 5% actually develop the active disease; however, all infected persons have a

life-long risk of becoming diseased. One hundred fifty-five cases of TB were reported in Connecticut during CY 1993.

The Tuberculosis Prevention and Control Program conducts state-wide surveillance and prevention activities as part of a national effort to eliminate tuberculosis. The program provides technical and financial assistance and staffing to local health departments, community agencies, and health care providers. Active cases of TB are identified and brought to treatment, and persons likely to be exposed to TB or who are in high-risk settings are screened and treated preventively.

TABLE 4-12. Disease treatment and preventive treatment indicators for CY 1993 for persons with active tuberculosis and those infected with M. tuberculosis (1).


Indicator                            Number    Percentb  

Completed disease therapy in               140       90% 
<12 months                                               

Infected contacts identified             2,354       99% 
and examined                                             

Completed preventive treatment                           

Infected contacts                           58       94% 

Tuberculin convertersa                     855       72% 

Others with M. tuberculosis                724       75% 
infection                                                



a Tuberculin converters are people who initially tested negative for TB, but who later became

infected, as indicated by a positive skin test within the past 2 years.

b Percent of reported cases.

OF NOTE

Co-infection with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) increases the likelihood that people infected with M. tuberculosis will develop active tuberculosis. Connecticut was the first state to specifically require reporting of persons co-infected with TB and HIV. Through prevention efforts in CY 1993, an estimated 25 co-infected Connecticut residents were prevented from developing active tuberculosis.

Among the northeast states in 1992, Connecticut had the highest proportion (92%) of TB patients who completed treatment (2).

REFERENCE

(1) Annual tuberculosis report, 1993. 1994. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Infectious Disease Surveillance and Control Division, Tuberculosis Control Program, Hartford, CT. 25 pp.

(2) Reported tuberculosis in the United States, 1993. 1994. US Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Prevention Services, Division of Tuberculosis Elimination.
 


5 CANCER

Incidence of Cancer

Clinical Stage of Disease at Diagnosis
 


5.1 Incidence of Cancer

The Connecticut Tumor Registry, located within DPHAS, is a population-based resource for examining rates and patterns of cancer in Connecticut residents. Established in 1941, the Registry compiles data on reported cancers diagnosed since 1935. Information is maintained on incident cancers (those that are newly diagnosed in an individual patient) and on clinical stage (extent of disease) at diagnosis, survival rates, and treatment. All hospitals and private pathology laboratories in the State are required by public health legislation to report incident cases. The identity of all patients who are reported to the Registry is protected by State Statute.

The Tumor Registry is used for cancer surveillance efforts on the state and local levels, and has been a part of the National Cancer Institute's Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) program since 1973. SEER data are used to set priorities for research on the prevention and treatment of cancer in the US population. A list of publications containing data from the Connecticut Tumor Registry is available from the Registry.

TABLE 5-1. Numbers of cancers diagnosed in male and female Connecticut residents during CY 1991 (1).


                 Males                     Females           

Rank  Site or type of      No.a    Site or type of      No.a   
cancer                       cancer                      

  1   Prostate               2,246 Breast                2,461 

  2   Lung                   1,460 Lung                    943 

  3   Colon                    734 Colon                   763 

  4   Bladder                  600 Corpus uteri            482 

  5   Rectum                   329 Ovary                   333 

  6   Non-Hodgkin's            298 Rectum                  277 
      lymphoma                                                 

  7   Melanoma of skin         277 Non-Hodgkin's           270 
                                   lymphoma                    

  8   Unknown                  254 Unknown                 254 

  9   Oral cavity,             250 Melanoma of skin        250 
      pharynx                                                  

 10   Kidney                   238 Bladder                 238 

 11   Stomach                  223 Pancreas                203 

 12   Leukemia                 164 Kidney                  173 

 13   Pancreas                 147 Oral cavity,            154 
                                   pharynx                     

 14   Larynx                   135 Uterine cervix          148 

 15   Brain, CNSb              134 Stomach                 148 

 16   Esophagus                129 Leukemia                142 

 17   Testis                   100 Thyroid                 118 

 18   Liver, ducts              84 Brain, CNS               88 

 19   Myeloma                   77 Myeloma                  79 

 20   Hodgkin's disease         57 Hodgkin's disease        55 

      ALL SITESc             8,306 ALL SITESc            8,056 



a Numbers of cancers (not persons with cancer).

b Central nervous system.

c Includes all invasive cancers (plus in situ bladder tumors) including sites not shown in table. In situ bladder tumors are included because they are difficult to distinguish histologically from invasive

tumors. Invasive tumors are those with a potential to spread to other tissues.

5.2. Clinical Stage of Disease at Diagnosis

Survival rates decline as the extent of disease at diagnosis increases. Screening of the general population for breast and cervical cancers is widely accepted as effective in reducing mortality. Screening for prostate and colorectal cancers is recommended by some organizations. The need for an effective screening test for ovarian cancer is evident from the large proportion of cases diagnosed at advanced stages (see below).

TABLE 5-2. Stage distribution (extent of disease at time of diagnosis) of invasive cancers diagnosed in CY 1991 in residents of Connecticut (1).


                          Stage of disease                   

Site              Locala  Regionalb Distantc Unstagedd  Totale  


Female        No.   1,568       670      114       109    2,461 
breast                                                          

                %    63.7      27.2      4.6       4.4      100 

Uterine       No.      72        27       30        19      148 
cervix                                                          

                %    48.6      18.2     20.3      12.8      100 

Ovary         No.      82        33      191        27      333 

                %    24.6       9.9     57.4       8.1      100 

Prostate      No.   1,376       195      294       381    2,246 

                %    61.3       8.7     13.1      17.0      100 

Colon,        No.     280       292      126        36      734 
males                                                           

                %    38.1      39.8     17.2       4.9      100 

Colon,        No.     255       320      130        58      763 
females                                                         

                %    33.4      41.9     17.0       7.6      100 

Rectum,       No.     151        96       52        30      329 
males                                                           

                %    45.9      29.2     15.8       9.1      100 

Rectum,       No.     103        95       38        41      277 
females                                                         

                %    37.2      34.3     13.7      14.8      100 



a Localized cancers are confined entirely to the organ of origin.

b Regional stage involves extension beyond the organ and directly into surrounding organs or tissues and/or into regional lymph nodes.

c Distant stage refers to spread to parts of the body remote from the primary tumor, either by direct extension or discontinuous metastasis (that is, spread of cancer cells by blood or lymph).

d Unstaged cancers are those for which information is not sufficient to assign a stage at diagnosis.

e Percentages do not always sum to 100, because of rounding.

OF NOTE

From 1983 and 1990, the use of partial mastectomy increased, and the use of modified radical mastectomy declined, for the treatment of local-stage breast cancers among Connecticut women (2). Partial mastectomy (with radiotherapy) has been shown in clinical trials to be as effective as modified radical mastectomy.

Residents of certain ocean-shoreline towns in Connecticut have higher incidence rates of skin melanomas; this may reflect greater exposure to intense sunlight at beaches (3).

REFERENCES

(1) Summary data for 1991. Department record. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Connecticut Tumor Registry. Hartford, CT.

(2) Polednak, A.P., and J.T. Flannery. 1993. Time trends in breast cancer treatment in Connecticut Connecticut Medicine 57: 59-64.

(3) Polednak, A.P. 1994. Cutaneous malignant melanoma in Connecticut towns, 1989-1991. Connecticut Medicine 58: 523-526.
 


6 ALCOHOL AND DRUG ADDICTION

Prevalence of Substance Abuse

Community-based Treatment Programs

Prevention Programs

Pre-trial Alcohol Education System (PAES)
 


6.1 Prevalence of Substance Abuse

The DPHAS Office of Addiction Services and Bureau of Community Health and State-operated Treatment Facilities were created when the Connecticut Alcohol and Drug Abuse Commission (CADAC) merged with the Department of Health Services in 1993. The two entities now plan, administer, and monitor the funding of programs for the prevention and treatment of abuse of alcohol and other drugs. They also fund and support the information and training needs of volunteers and professionals working in the field of addictions. Diverse substance abuse prevention and rehabilitation services discourage and prevent initial involvement with alcohol and other drugs, or lead to the recovery and rehabilitation of those who already have substance abuse problems.

DPHAS collects data on all licensed substance abuse services in Connecticut. In CY 1993, DPHAS operated 4 facilities (11 clinics), funded and monitored grants to 142 community programs, and collected treatment data from an additional 61 programs that did not receive funding from DPHAS.

TABLE 6-1. Estimated prevalencea of substance abuse in individuals

aged 18 and older in Connecticut (1).


Populationb                Estimated No.  

Alcohol abusers                   251,000 

Drug abusers                       65,000 

Injecting drug users               35,000 



a Based on extrapolations from national and other states' studies. Prevalence is the proportion of individuals in a given population who have a particular attribute at a specified time or period of time.

b The populations of alcohol abusers and drug abusers are not mutually exclusive.

TABLE 6-2. Primary problem substances used by clients who received services at facilities operated, funded, and not funded by DPHAS during CY 1993 (1). Numbers are percentagesa of clients served or treatment episodes.


                          Primary problem substance        

Facility type      Alcohol  Heroin  Cocaine Marijuana   Other  


Operated by DPHAS       53%     31%     14%         1%      1% 

Funded by DPHAS         50%     24%     18%         7%      2% 

Not funded by           72%     12%     12%         2%      2% 
DPHAS                                                          

TOTAL                   55%     22%     16%         5%      2% 



a Percentage totals may not equal 100% because of rounding.

6.2 Community-based Treatment Programs

Treatment programs provide residential and outpatient services, targeting special populations such as youth, pregnant women and their children, minorities, the elderly, people with HIV/AIDS, and the dually diagnosed. Residential services are provided at 24-hour, live-in facilities, and include long-term care, medical detoxification, and intensive, intermediate, and long-term treatment and rehabilitation. Outpatient services include the medical management of withdrawal from alcohol and drugs, the provision of medication and counseling for individuals addicted to heroin and other opiates (methadone maintenance program), and counseling services for addicted individuals, their families, and significant others.

TABLE 6-3. Race and ethnicity, by sex and treatment modality, of recipientsa of residential and outpatient alcohol and drug rehabilitative services in clinics that were operated, funded, or not funded by DPHAS during CY 1993b (2).


                         Treatment modalityd                 

Residential                              
Outpatient             

Clinic type/           No.       No.      No.      No.    Total 
Race & Ethnicityc     Male    Female     Male   Female      No. 

Operated by DPHAS                                               

White                3,547     1,039      N/A      N/A    4,586 

Black                1,197       435      N/A      N/A    1,632 

Hispanic             1,087       258      N/A      N/A    1,345 

Other                   34        10      N/A      N/A       44 

Missing/Unknown         11         5      N/A      N/A       16 

TOTAL, operated      5,876     1,747      N/A      N/A    7,623 

Funded by DPHAS                                                 

White                5,909     1,586    6,812    3,368   17,675 

Black                3,445     1,041    3,967    1,449    9,902 

Hispanic             1,709       373    2,734      901    5,717 

Other                   40        14       97       37      188 

Missing/Unknown          8         1       11        3       23 

TOTAL, funded       11,111     3,015   13,621    5,758   33,505 

Not funded by                                                   
DPHAS                                                           

White                3,439     1,347    3,964    1,127    9,877 

Black                1,023       425      748      339    2,535 

Hispanic               430       168      290      108      996 

Other                   25         4       33       13       75 

Missing/Unknown          5         1       12        9       27 

TOTAL, not funded    4,922     1,945    5,047    1,596   13,510 

TOTAL, all          21,909     6,707   18,668    7,354   54,638 
facilities                                                      



a Numbers are for treatment episodes, and do not represent individual clients served. Figures include

those persons in treatment on January 1, 1993, plus all admissions and treatment episodes from

January 1 through December 31, 1993.

b Figures include counts for prison behavioral studies, DWI (driving while intoxicated), residential clients, employer assistance programs, and research projects.

c All categories of race and ethnicity are mutually exclusive.

d Residential services include long-term care, medical detoxification, and intensive, intermediate, and long-term treatment and rehabilitation. Outpatient services include the medical management of withdrawal from alcohol and drugs, the provision of medication and counseling for individuals addicted to heroin and other opiates (methadone maintenance program), and counseling services for addicted individuals, their families, and significant others. Outpatient services are not offered at facilities operated by DPHAS.

TABLE 6-4. Age, by sex and treatment modality, of recipientsa of residential and outpatient alcohol and drug rehabilitative services in clinics that were operated, funded, or not funded by DPHAS during CY 1993b (2).


                         Treatment modalityd                 

Residential                              
Outpatient             

Clinic type/           No.       No.      No.      No.    Total 
Age groupc            Male    Female     Male   Female      No. 

Operated by DPHAS                                               

<20                     44        13      N/A      N/A       57 

20-34                2,641       982      N/A      N/A    3,623 

35-49                2,454       628      N/A      N/A    3,082 

50-64                  616       104      N/A      N/A      720 

65+                    121        20      N/A      N/A      141 

TOTAL, operated      5,876     1,747      N/A      N/A    7,623 

Funded by DPHAS                                                 

<20                    270        68      790      244    1,372 

20-34                5,020     1,898    7,286    3,169   17,373 

35-49                4,449       928    4,777    2,002   12,156 

50-64                1,170        97      580      248    2,095 

65+                    202        24      188       95      509 

TOTAL, funded       11,111     3,015   13,621    5,758   33,505 

Not funded by                                                   
DPHAS                                                           

<20                    289       109      231      120      749 

20-34                1,968       998    2,539      839    6,344 

35-49                2,087       637    1,890      549    5,163 

50-64                  508       153      334       69    1,064 

65+                     70        48       53       19      190 

TOTAL, not funded    4,922     1,945    5,047    1,596   13,510 

TOTAL, all          21,909     6,707   18,668    7,354   54,638 
facilities                                                      



a Numbers are for treatment episodes, and do not represent individual clients served. Figures include

those persons in treatment on January 1, 1993, plus all admissions and treatment episodes from

January 1 through December 31, 1993.

b Figures include counts for prison behavioral studies, DWI (driving while intoxicated), residential

clients, employer assistance programs, and research projects.

c For residential clients, based on age at time of admission.

d Residential services include long-term care, medical detoxification, and intensive, intermediate, and long-term treatment and rehabilitation. Outpatient services include the medical management of withdrawal from alcohol and drugs, the provision of medication and counseling for individuals

addicted to heroin and other opiates (methadone maintenance program), and counseling services for addicted individuals, their families, and significant others. Outpatient services are not offered at

facilities operated by DPHAS.

TABLE 6-5. Insurance status, by sex and treatment modality, of recipientsa of residential and outpatient alcohol and drug rehabilitative services in clinics that were operated, funded, or not funded by DPHAS during CY 1993b (2).


                         Treatment modalityd                  

Clinic type/         Residential       Outpatient              

Insurance         No.Male  No.Female      No. No.Female    Total 
statusc                                  Male                No. 

Operated by                                                      
DPHAS                                                            

No insurance        4,370      1,052      N/A       N/A    5,422 

Blue Cross/Blue        38          7      N/A       N/A       45 
Shield                                                           

Other private          90         36      N/A       N/A      126 
insurance                                                        

Medicare              213         65      N/A       N/A      278 

CHAMPUS                14          2      N/A       N/A       16 

City or local         721        323      N/A       N/A    1,044 
welfare                                                          

Medicaid              412        260      N/A       N/A      672 

HMO                    17          2      N/A       N/A       19 

CADAC contract          1          0      N/A       N/A        1 

TOTAL, operated     5,876      1,747      N/A       N/A    7,623 

Funded by DPHAS                                                  

No insurance        2,460        752    7,968     1,875   13,055 

Blue Cross/Blue       119         26      402       184      731 
Shield                                                           

Other private         350         91    1,173       559    2,173 
insurance                                                        

Medicare              648         56      275       159    1,138 

CHAMPUS                33          4       12         6       55 

City or local       4,656      1,108    2,580     1,220    9,564 
welfare                                                          

Medicaid            1,064        577      735     1,529    3,905 

HMO                   209         68      181        89      547 

CADAC contract      1,572        333      295       134    2,334 

Unspecified             0          0        0         3        3 
third party                                                      

TOTAL, funded      11,111      3,015   13,621     5,758   33,505 

Not funded by                                                    
DPHAS                                                            

No insurance          460        275    1,719       312    2,766 

Blue Cross/Blue       755        217      483       109    1,564 
Shield                                                           

Other private       2,154        531    1,377       302    4,364 
insurance                                                        

Medicare               43         18       93        38      192 

CHAMPUS                11         12       19        14       56 

City or local         818        290      466       187    1,761 
welfare                                                          

Medicaid              364        472      241       392    1,469 

HMO                   312        129      629       230    1,300 

CADAC contract          5          1       20        12       38 

TOTAL, not          4,922      1,945    5,047     1,596   13,510 
funded                                                           

TOTAL, all         21,909      6,707   18,668     7,354   54,638 
facilities                                                       



a Numbers are for treatment episodes, and do not represent individual clients served. Figures include

those persons in treatment on January 1, 1993, plus all admissions and treatment episodes from

January 1 through December 31, 1993.

b Figures include counts for prison behavioral studies, DWI (driving while intoxicated), residential

clients, employer assistance programs, and research projects.

c For residential clients, based on insurance status at time of admission.

d Outpatient services are not offered at facilities operated by DPHAS. See introductory material in

Section 6.2, Community-based Treatment Programs, for descriptions of inpatient and outpatient

clients and services.

6.3 Prevention Programs

The DPHAS-funded prevention system uses a systems approach, incorporating a statewide prevention infrastructure and a wide range of community-based programs for preventing alcohol, tobacco, and other drug (ATOD) abuse. It employs six key strategies for changing the attitudes and behaviors that contribute to alcohol and drug abuse: 1) heightening information and public awareness; 2) educating and developing new skills; 3) participating in activities that exclude ATODs; 4) involving communities and social institutions in prevention; 5) promoting appropriate changes in social policy; and 6) early identification and intervention.

The system targets special populations, including children of alcoholics, high-risk youth, lesbians and gay men, the elderly, people with disabilities, pregnant women and women of childbearing age, minorities, school dropouts, and the unemployed.

TABLE 6-6. Summary of prevention and intervention program measures for alcohol and drug addiction, SFY 1994 (3).


Program Measure                        Number    

Prevention infrastructure programs            17 

Training events held                         373 

Individuals served                         4,142 

Technical assistance                      22,925 

Local prevention councils/towns          120/169 
served                                           

Research & demonstration programs              7 

Educational sessions and activities          306 

Individuals serveda                        1,878 

Primary prevention & early                    21 
intervention programs                            

Educational sessions and activities        5,497 

Individuals served                        25,915 

Referrals made                                94 

Local prevention council programs            155 



a Individuals served include those primarily targeted in grants, not total number reached.

6.4 Pre-trial Alcohol Education System (PAES)

PAES provides counseling and education for state residents charged for the first time with operating a motor vehicle under the influence of alcohol or drugs. Offenders may be brought face-to-face with survivors of drunk driving accidents and families of victims.

TABLE 6-7. Numbers of participants in the Pre-trial Alcohol Education System

(PAES) during CY 1993 (3).


Program measure                            Number or %  

Participants in education track                   1,280 

Education track successfully completed              97% 

Participants in therapeutic track (group          4,634 
intervention)                                           

Therapeutic track successfully completed            94% 

Participants recommended for further                645 
treatment                                               

Participants convicted of subsequent                    
DWIa after                                          710 
  completing PAES                                       



a Driving while intoxicated.

OF NOTE

In Connecticut during CY 1993:

Four out of every 100 treatment episodes involved youths under the age of 20 (2).

The youngest client was 10 years old, and the oldest was 94 (2).

Almost half of all substance abusers in treatment first used drugs or alcohol before the age of 17, and 4% were under age 11 (2).

One in five clients injected drugs (2).

About one-third of the clients had dependent children under age 18, and 5% of the female clients were pregnant (2).

According to the 1993 National Household Drug Abuse Survey (4):

About 11.7 million Americans currently use illicit drugs.

Marijuana is used most commonly (about 5.1 million weekly users).

Of all current illicit drug users, 74% are white, 13% black, and 10% Hispanic.

Since 1979, the percentage of drug users over 35 years old nearly tripled, while users in all other age groups declined.

Only about half of youths aged 12-17 feel there is great risk in using marijuana occasionally or in trying cocaine, PCP, or heroin. In contrast, 77% of the general population aged 12 and older associated great risk with marijuana use, and 67% perceived great risk in trying cocaine, 71% in trying PCP, and 75% in trying heroin.

REFERENCES

(1) Statewide services delivery plan for substance abuse treatment services. Connecticut Alcohol and Drug Abuse Commission, Hartford, CT, March, 1990.

(2) Client information and collection system (CICS) data for CY 1993. 1994. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Office of Addiction Services, Hartford, CT.

(3) Unpublished department records. 1994. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Office of Addiction Services, Hartford, CT.

(4) National household survey on drug abuse: Population estimates 1993. 1994. US Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, Office of Applied Studies, Washington, DC.
 


7 FAMILY HEALTH

Adolescent Pregnancy Prevention & Young Parent Program

Healthy Start

Special Supplemental Food Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC)

Genetics

Sudden Infant Death Syndrome

Immunizations

Healthy Steps

Children with Special Health Care Needs

Nutrition
 


7.1 Adolescent Pregnancy Prevention and Young Parent

Program

The objectives of the Adolescent Pregnancy Prevention and Young Parent Program (APP/YPP) are to prevent initial and repeat pregnancies, assure healthy birth outcomes, and promote self-sufficiency among the teen population, through community outreach and planning activities between private and public sectors, along with family counseling on reproductive and primary health care for teens and low-income families.

Thirteen APP/YPP programs serve at-risk pregnant and parenting adolescents and their partners, whether they are in or out of school. The programs are based in four hospitals (in Bridgeport, Meriden, Middletown, and Milford), two schools (in New Haven and New London) and seven community agencies (in Bristol, Danielson, New Britain, Norwich, Stamford, Waterbury, and Willimantic).

TABLE 7-1. Activities and adolescents served by the Adolescent Pregnancy

Prevention and Young Parent Program during FFY 1993 (1).


Type of service                          Number   

Long-term intensive case management               
and care                                          

     Clients served                         2,386 

Prevention (public information and                
education)                                        

     Community public education             1,862 
meetings held                                     

     Clients served                        13,162 





OF NOTE

Of the 220,000 female adolescents in Connecticut it is estimated that half are at risk for pregnancy, and 9,400 are already pregnant or parents (2).

Only 6% of APP/YPP clients experience repeat pregnancies while enrolled in the programs, compared to 23% nationally (3).

The incidence of low birthweight babies born to teens in Connecticut APP/YPP programs is 3%, well below the national average of 10% (3).

REFERENCES

(1) APP/YPP FFY 1992-1993 service utilization summary. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Community Health and State-operated Treatment Facilities, Adolescent Pregnancy Prevention/Young Parent Program. Hartford, CT.

(2) LaPlante, O.R. 1991. APP/YPP services to female adolescents. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Community Health and State-operated Treatment Facilities, Adolescent Pregnancy Prevention/Young Parent Program, Hartford, CT. (Chart.)

(3) Gioco, D., and C.B. Stern. 1990. Survey shows YPPs/APPs prevent second pregnancies, low birth weights. Misconceptions, January, 1990: 1-3.

7.2 Healthy Start Program

Healthy Start is a statewide collaborative initiative between the Department of Public Health and Addiction Services and the Department of Social Services to improve access to medical and support services for pregnant and postpartum women, infants, and children through age six (age 11 effective July 1, 1994) who live in households with a total income at or below 185% of the federal poverty level (see Appendix A-2).

Funds from a federal Title V Maternal and Child Health Block Grant to DPHAS are used: 1) to provide program enhancements not funded by Medicaid, such as outreach/case-finding, liaison, and case management, to ensure a healthy pregnancy outcome; and 2) to provide ambulatory medical care to pregnant clients not eligible for Title XIX Medicaid (undocumented residents, non-resident aliens, and unemancipated teens) through Extended Eligibility Coverage. Twenty-three grantees and their numerous subcontractors are funded by Healthy Start in Connecticut.

TABLE 7-2. Numbers of women, infants, and children who received liaison and/or

case management services through Healthy Start in SFY 1994a (1).


                                   Services provided        

Case                
Client type                  Liaison   management    Total    

Women                            6,062       7,999     14,061 

Infantsb                         3,630       3,964      7,594 

Childrenc                        2,212       1,258      3,470 

TOTAL                           11,904      13,221     25,125 



a An unduplicated total of 15,938 clients (8,271 women and 7,667 infants and children) received

services through Healthy Start during SFY 1994. Some received only liaison services, some only

case management, and others received both. Hence, column totals (numbers of women, infants,

and children who received either type of service) are unduplicated, whereas row totals (sums of

women, infants, or children who received liaison and/or case management services) are duplicated.

b Infants are from birth through 12 months.

c Children are from age 1 through 6 years.

REFERENCE

(1) Summary data for SFY 1994. Department records. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Community Health and State-operated Treatment Services, Maternal and Child Health Division, Healthy Start Program, Hartford, CT.

7.3 Special Supplemental Food Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC Program)

The US Department of Agriculture sponsors the WIC Program, which provides specific nutritious foods and nutrition education to eligible pregnant and breast-feeding women up to 1 year after delivery, non-breast-feeding mothers up to 6 months after delivery, and infants and children up to their fifth birthday. Eligibility is based on the applicant's income (up to 185% of federal poverty level, see Appendix A-2) and nutritional need. Once certified, eligible participants receive the selected foods and nutrition education for 6 months. Participation after 6 months may be continued if necessary. The WIC food list consists of formulas, cereals, and juices for infants, and milk, cheeses, eggs, fruit juices, legumes, peanut butter, iron-fortified cereals, canned tuna, and carrots for women and children. Children with special dietary needs may receive formulas if prescribed by a physician.

WIC is a 100% federally-funded program administered in Connecticut through the DPHAS Bureau of Community Health and State-operated Treatment Facilities, Maternal and Child Health Section. Twenty-one local agencies (hospitals, community health centers, community action agencies, and municipalities) are awarded contracts to provide services to people in Connecticut's 169 towns.

TABLE 7-3. Numbers of women, infants, and

children who participated in the Connecticut

WIC Program during FFY 1993 (1).


Client type         Number   

Women                 10,468 

Infants               13,535 

Children              41,731 

TOTAL                 65,734 



OF NOTE

Nationally, about 6 million of an estimated 9 million eligible persons are served by the WIC Program.

In 1993 Connecticut ranked first in the nation in serving the eligible population; every eligible person in the state (based on estimates of population eligibility) received WIC Program services.

Every dollar invested in WIC for pregnant women produces $1.92-4.21 in Medicaid savings for newborns and their mothers in the first days after birth, and Medicaid costs are reduced an average of $376-753 for each participant who receives WIC benefits at some time during pregnancy (2).

REFERENCES

(1) Summary data for FFY 1993 (provisional). State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Community Health and State-operated Treatment Facilities, Maternal and Child Health Section, WIC Program, Hartford, CT.

(2) US Department of Agriculture. Addendum to the 1990 Mathematica Policy Research Inc. Study, October, 1991.

7.4 Genetics

Five programs are operated under the aegis of the DPHAS Genetics Unit.

Newborn Screening Program

All newborns delivered in CT hospitals are required by law to be screened for certain genetic disorders which, undiagnosed and untreated, cause irreversible mental retardation and/or death. The Newborn Screening Program follows up and tracks all infants with positive screening tests.

TABLE 7-4. Clients served and results of tests conducted through the Newborn Screening Program during CY 1993 (1).


Screening or service type                    No.     
clients   

Total newborns tested                         47,496 

Initial positive (non-sickle cell)a              889 

Identified diseases (non-sickle cell):               

Benign hyperphenylalanine                          1 

Biotinidase deficiency                             0 

Congenital hypothyroidism                         10 

Homocystinuria                                     0 

Maple syrup urine disease (MSUD)                   0 

Phenylketonuria (PKU)                              1 

Sickle cell diseases and traits:                     

Hemoglobinopathies (sickle cell                   25 
diseases)                                            

Sickle cell traits                               566 



a All babies that test positive initially are followed up and tracked for identification of disease.

Clinical Genetics Program

This program provides comprehensive genetic diagnostic, counseling, and testing services based in two university hospitals (John Dempsey Hospital and Yale-New Haven Hospital), with field clinics in Norwich, Norwalk, Danbury, and Bridgeport.

Clinical Sickle Cell Program

This program provides comprehensive testing, counseling, and treatment services based at Yale University's Comprehensive Sickle Cell Service or St. Francis Hospital's Sickle Cell Service. Field clinics are located at Bridgeport Hospital, Norwalk Hospital, and St. Mary's Hospital.

Maternal PKU Program

In collaboration with the University of Connecticut and Yale University medical schools, the Maternal PKU Program tracks and provides genetic and nutritional counseling and high-risk pregnancy care to all adolescent and adult females in CT with phenylketonuria (PKU). Women with PKU are at high risk for delivering abnormal babies, but the abnormalities can be prevented by effective dietary intervention before conception and throughout pregnancy.

Pregnancy Exposure Information Service (PEIS)

Based at the University of Connecticut Health Center's Department of Pediatric Health, Division of Human Genetics, the PEIS provides information and referral services to pregnant women and health care providers concerning the potential teratogenic effects of drugs, maternal illness, and occupational exposure via a statewide toll-free telephone number.

TABLE 7-5. Clients served by the Clinical Genetics Program, Clinical

Sickle Cell Program, Maternal PKU Program, and Pregnancy Exposure

Information Service (PEIS) during CY 1993 (1).


Program or service                        No.     
clients   

Clinical  Genetics Program                        

Outreach clinics                              191 

Clinics at Yale University & UConn                
Health Center                                     

Prenatal services                          5,000a 

General genetics services                  2,500a 

Clinical Sickle Cell Program                  180 

Maternal PKU Program                           44 

Pregnancy Exposure Information              2,641 
Service                                           



a Estimates based on extrapolation from first-quarter actuals. Annual counts not available.

OF NOTE

More than 5,000 genetic disorders, which affect an estimated 32,000 Connecticut residents, have been identified (2).

Congenital anomalies are the leading cause of infant death. Five percent of all infants, or 1,300 to 2,100 of the babies born in CT each year, have a congenital anomaly (2).

Approximately 35% of hospital admissions to children's services are for conditions of genetic origin (2).

One in 400 babies is born with a serious congenital malformation or mental retardation, as a result of in utero exposure to a drug, chemical, illicit substance, infectious agent, or radiation.

REFERENCES

(1) Summary data for CY 1993 (provisional). Department record. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Community Health and State-operated Treatment Facilities, Genetics Unit, Hartford, CT.

(2) Annual report for CY 1992: Genetics Unit. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Community Health and State-operated Treatment Facilities, Genetics Unit, Hartford, CT.

7.5 Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) Program

Sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) refers to the unexplained, sudden and unexpected death of an apparently healthy baby under 1 year old. The exact cause of death remains unknown even after autopsy. SIDS is not caused, however, by vaccination, suffocation, or bottle feeding, nor is it contagious or heritable.

The DPHAS SIDS Program Coordinator provides immediate crisis intervention, (telephone counseling, information, and referral to a SIDS support group) and follow-up to the families of every SIDS victim in Connecticut, upon notification of a SIDS death by the State Medical Examiner's Office. The Program Coordinator also offers SIDS training to first responders, such as State Police, state and local auxiliary police, and emergency personnel, and provides consultation and technical assistance to community-based groups.

TABLE 7-6. Numbers and percents of victims of sudden infant death syndrome,

by sex and race/ ethnicity, in Connecticut during SFYs 1992, 1993, and 1994 (1).


                             State fiscal year             

1992           1993          1994a     

Sex or             No.      %      No.     %      No.      %    
race/ethnicity                                                  

Sex                                                             

Male                  25    59.5      16   61.5      17    54.8 

Female                17    40.5      10   38.5      14    45.2 

Race/Ethnicityb                                                 

White                 30    71.4      18   69.2      19    61.3 

Black                 11    26.2       7   26.9      12    38.7 

Hispanic               0       0       1    3.9       0       0 

Asian                  1     2.4       0      0       0       0 

TOTAL                 42     100      26    100      31     100 



a At the close of SFY 1994 31 cases were confirmed and 3 additional cases were pending.

b All racial and ethnic categories are mutually exclusive.

OF NOTE

SIDS is the number one cause of death among infants between the ages of one month and one year.

Approximately 6,000 babies die of SIDS every year in the US.

Blacks are disproportionately represented.

REFERENCE

(1) Summary data for SFY 1992, SFY 1993, and SFY 1994. Department records. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Addiction and Community Health Services, Maternal and Child Health Division, Sudden Infant Death Syndrome Program, Hartford, CT.

7.6 Immunization Program

The primary purpose of the Connecticut Immunization Program is to prevent the occurrence and transmission of vaccine preventable diseases--diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus, poliomyelitis, measles, rubella, mumps, invasive Hemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) disease, hepatitis B, influenza, and pneumococcal disease. This is accomplished through early childhood immunization and immunization of adults.

TABLE 7-7. Percent of Connecticut children immunized at age

24 months, based on results of CY 1993 and CY 1994 retrospective

surveysa(1).


                                 Survey year      

Immunization series            1993        1994    
completedb                                         

4 DTP, 3 OPV, 1 MMR               63.6% 70.3%c     

3 DTP, 3 OPV 1 MMR                73.1% 78.9%      

MMR complete                      88.2% 90.5%c     



a The retrospective surveys randomly assessed the immunization records of children currently in kindergartens throughout CT, most of whom were born in 1988 and were expected to complete their basic immunization series within two years of birth.

b DTP = diphtheria, tetanus, and pertussis vaccines. OPV = oral polio vaccine. MMR = measles, mumps, and rubella vaccines.

c These levels were record highs for the State for immunizations completed by age 24 months.

OF NOTE

On September 29, 1994, the World Health Organization declared that polio has been eradicated from the Western Hemisphere (2). The last documented case of human-to-human transmission of the wild polio virus in the US was in 1979, and the last Connecticut cases occurred in 1972 (3).

There were less than 10 reported cases of measles, mumps, and rubella in CT in 1993, whereas tens of thousands of cases were reported annually before 1965 (3).

A total of 794,238 doses of DTP, polio, measles, rubella, mumps, and Hib vaccines were administered through the Connecticut Immunization Program in 1992 (3).

REFERENCES

(1) Retrospective surveys of immunization status, 1993 and 1994. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Health Promotion, Immunization Program, Hartford, CT.

(2) WHO declares polio a disease of the past. Hartford Courant, September 30, 1994, p. A8.

(3) Report prepared for DPHAS Health Research and Data Analysis Unit, March 16, 1994. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Health Promotion and Disease Prevention, Immunization Program, Hartford, CT.

7.7 Healthy Steps

Healthy Steps is a pilot insurance program that targets children under age 14 who live in and attend school in the city of New Haven, whose family incomes are below 200% of the federal poverty level (see Appendix A-2), who are not enrolled in Medicaid, and do not have another source of health care coverage. The program is state-subsidized and administered by DPHAS. Its aims are to improve access to primary care, improve health status, reduce the level of hospital uncompensated care, and reduce inappropriate use of hospital emergency rooms for primary care services.

Healthy Steps provides comprehensive health care coverage, including primary and preventive care, inpatient and outpatient hospital care, prescription drugs, and dental services. The program uses a managed-care system administered by Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Connecticut.

TABLE 7-8. Age, sex, and income level of Healthy Steps

enrollees during CY 1993 (1).


Characteristic     Number   Percent 

Total                 504      100% 

Agea                                

<1                     15      3.0% 

1-5                   124     24.6% 

6-13                  365     72.4% 

Sex                                 

Male                  268     53.2% 

Female                236     46.8% 

Income (% FPL)b                     

<61%                   36      7.2% 

61-100%               115     22.8% 

101-133%              133     26.4% 

134-185%              177     35.1% 

>185%                  43      8.5% 



a Age at the time of enrollment.

b Income as percent of Federal Poverty Level (FPL) at the time

of enrollment (see Appendix A-2).

TABLE 7-9. Total claims and expenditures for health services provided through Healthy Steps, and mean claims and expenditures per full-year-equivalent (FYE) enrolleea during CY 1993(1).


                              Claims                        
Expenditures ($)  

Service type             Total Mean per      Total Mean per   
FYE                 FYE        

Ambulatory medical                                            
care                                                          

Primary care             1,585         4.3  51,456        140 

Specialty care             165         0.4  15,885         43 



Table 7-9 continues.

TABLE 7-9. (Continued.)


                              Claims                         
Expenditures ($)  

Service type             Total Mean per       Total Mean per    
FYE                  FYE         

Ambulatory medical                                              
care (cont'd)                                                   

Outpatient hospital                                             
servicesb                                                       

     Hospital charges      127         0.3   45,352         123 

     Physician              55         0.1    8,366          23 
services                                                        

Inpatient hospital                                              
servicesb                                                       

Hospital charges            15        <0.1   44,260         120 

Physician services          43         0.1    5,573          15 

Dental care              1,551         4.2   67,185         182 

Prescription drugsc        637         1.7    7,741          21 

Laboratory                 520         1.4    6,376          17 

Transportation               0           0        0           0 

Appliances/Equipment         6        <0.1      527           2 

Total                    4,704        12.8 $252,721        $686 



a Of the 504 children who enrolled in the program, 378 remained enrolled continuously throughout 1993. Because of the variation in duration of enrollment, enrollees were weighted before analysis of service utilization and expenditures to produce 368.3 full-year equivalent (FYE) enrollees. A child enrolled for 6 months thus has half the weight of a child enrolled for the full 12 months.

b Claims for inpatient and outpatient physician services were submitted as part of hospital services claims. There were 127 outpatient visits with 55 associated physician claims, and 15 inpatient hospitalizations with 43 associated physician claims.

c Prescription drugs were the only services for which a copayment was charged. The copayments ($2/prescription) amounted to an average of $3 per FYE enrollee.

OF NOTE

Nationwide in 1993, the number of people without health insurance was 39.7 million, including 9.5 million under the age of 18 years. Based on 1991-1992 percentages, Connecticut ranked third lowest among the states in uninsureds, with 9.1%. Louisiana was highest with 23.1% (2).

According to a 1992 estimate, 250,000 Connecticut residents had no health insurance. This figure did not include the recently unemployed who may have lost their coverage (3).

In 1992 an estimated one-quarter of the uninsured in Connecticut, or about 66,500 people, were children under the age of 18 (3).

REFERENCES

(1) Schwalberg, R. and L. Bartlett. 1994. An evaluation of the State of Connecticut's Healthy Steps pilot insurance program. Prepared for Connecticut Department of Public Health and Addiction Services by Health Systems Research, Inc., Washington, DC.

(2) US Bureau of the Census. 1994. Cited in: State Health Notes (George Washington University) 15(191): 8.

(3) Arnold, J. 1992. Pursuing health care reform in Connecticut. Prepared for the State of Connecticut, Health Care Access Commission. Lewin ICF, June, 1992.

7.8 Children with Special Health Care Needs (CSHCN)

An estimated 46,315 Connecticut children under the age of 20 years have special health care needs (1). The objective of the CSHCN program is to assure that children with special health care needs receive early identification and access to complex, highly specialized, interdisciplinary diagnostic and treatment services, through community-based care. The services covered under the CSHCN program include medical specialty care, hospital outpatient care, laboratory and radiology services, rehabilitation services, equipment, and medications and prescriptions.

Table 7-10. Services provided and types of clients served by the Connecticut Children with Special Health Care Needs program in FFY 1993(2).


Service type         Client type                          No. 
clients 

Community-baseda     Orthopedic/pediatric                 360 

                     Other multiple diagnoses             640 

Tertiary-basedb      Cardiac                            4,700 

                     Juvenile diabetes and cystic         860 
                     fibrosis                                 

                     Pediatric, orthopedic, and           190 
                     neurological                             

Child developmentc   All types (for diagnosis             319 
                     only)                                    

TOTAL                                                   7,069 



a Provided through contractual arrangements with community-based care providers

(orthopedic/pediatric clinics) for specialty care.

b Provided through contractual arrangements with tertiary care centers (Yale University School of

Medicine, University of Connecticut School of Medicine, and Hartford Hospital).

c Provided mainly through contractual arrangements with clinics in Hartford, New Haven, Bridgeport, Norwich, and Torrington. CSHCN staff also conduct child development assessments in northwest Connecticut.

OF NOTE

CSHCN is the oldest maternal and child health program at DPHAS. It began in 1937 as part of the Social Security Act of 1935.

Nationally, 15% of all children (nearly 10 million) have some chronic health problem; 6% (nearly 4 million) have a limit on usual childhood activities (school, play, etc.); 1% (about 700,000) have both a disability and low income that qualifies them for Supplemental Security Income; 0.2% (about 150,000) have limitations in their activities of daily living (eating, walking, etc.); and 0.1% (about 40,000) reside in long-term care institutions (3).

REFERENCES

(1) Maternal child health block grant application. 1994. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Community Health Services Division, Children with Special Health Care Needs Program, Hartford, CT.

(2) CSHCN summary data for FFY 1992-93 (provisional). State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Community Health and State-operated Treatment Facilities, Children with Special Health Care Needs Program, Hartford, CT.

(3) Buchanan, G. 1994. How many children have special health care needs? Presented at Pediatric Institute, Columbus, OH, June, 1994.

7.9 Nutrition Program

The DPHAS Nutrition Program provides nutrition consultation, training, and technical assistance to health care providers, community leaders, educators, school food service personnel, the food industry, the public, and the media throughout Connecticut, in order to promote health, prevent disease, and reduce health care costs. Major, ongoing initiatives include: "5 a Day for Better Health," which aims to increase to five the portions of fruits and vegetables consumed daily; promoting optimal nutrition for children with special health care needs; and "Munch a Healthy Lunch," a week-long celebration during National Nutrition Month (March), highlighting nutrition education and healthy menus in schools across Connecticut.

TABLE 7-11. Education, materials, and services provided through the initiatives

and activities of the DPHAS Nutrition Program during SFY 1994 (1).


Type of activity or service/recipient       Number   

"Munch a Healthy Lunch" celebration                  
participants:                                        

Adults                                         3,375 

Students                                     174,010 

Recipients of nutrition education and                
materials at the 1994                        10,000a 
   Food and Nutrition Show (Hartford                 
Civic Center)                                        

"5-a-Day" program participants (adults        >4,000 
and children)                                        

School breakfast videos and kits               2,000 
distributed                                          

Adult attendees at nutrition conferences         527 
and presentations                                    



a Estimate based on volume of literature distributed.

OF NOTE

Broccoli was voted the favorite vegetable, and strawberries the favorite fruit, by more than 3,000 Connecticut residents of all ages at the 1994 Food and Nutrition Show.

Only 37% of Connecticut women breast feed their babies upon hospital discharge, and the rate declines to 11% by 5-6 months (2).

Obesity in American youth is on the rise. According to the CDC's third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (3), 20% of males and 22% of females age 12-19 are overweight. This represents an increase of 6% since the last survey. (See also Sections 3.2 and 3.3.)

REFERENCES

(1) Annual report for SFY 1994. 1994. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Community Health Services Division, Nutrition Program, Hartford, CT.

(2) Mothers' survey. 1991. Ross Products Division, Abbott Laboratories, Columbus, OH.

(3) Division of Health Examination Statistics, National Center for Health Statistics, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 1994. Prevalence of overweight among adolescents--United States, 1988-1991. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 43:818-821.
 


8 ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH

Asbestos

Food Protection

Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention

Occupational Health Surveillance

Radon

Recreational Health and Safety

On-site Sewage Disposal and Groundwater Control

Water Supplies
 


8.1 Asbestos

Asbestos is a generic term for various forms of hydrated magnesium silicate. Because it is incombustible and chemically resistant, it was commonly used for fireproofing, electrical insulation, building materials, brake linings, and chemical filters.

The DPHAS Asbestos Program aims to reduce cancer and other diseases caused by asbestos exposure. The program staff perform compliance inspections for asbestos abatement, evaluate the implementation of school asbestos management plans, and provide technical assistance to the public and the asbestos industry concerning proper conduct of abatement activities. All training courses for asbestos abatement workers, site supervisors, and consultants must be approved by the DPHAS Asbestos Program. Licensing of asbestos abatement contractors and consultants became mandatory as of November, 1994 (see Section 10.3, Environmental Health Professions).

TABLE 8-1. Summary of activities of the Asbestos Program during FFY 1994 (1).


Activity                                      Number   

Abatement notifications received                 3,117 

AWP applicationsa reviewed                         210 

Compliance inspections performed                   110 

    Conditions of non-compliance requiring          32 
enforcement action                                     

School inspections performed                       122 

    Non-compliance letters issued                   34 



a Applications for review of alternate work practice (AWP) for regulatory compliance.

OF NOTE

Prolonged inhalation of fibrous asbestos particles, which are released when it is handled (e.g. during mining, milling, or remodeling), causes asbestosis, a type of chronic lung inflammation. Asbestos also is a known carcinogen, causing lung cancers and mesotheliomas.

Asbestos is currently disposed in authorized waste disposal facilities. Disposal in Connecticut requires authorization from the Department of Environmental Protection.

REFERENCE

(1) Summary data for FFY 1994 (provisional). State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Environmental Health Services Division, Asbestos Program, Hartford, CT.

8.2 Food Protection

The Food Protection Program seeks to reduce the public risk of food-borne illness by ensuring reasonable protection from contaminated food and by improving the sanitary condition of food establishments. This mission is carried out by promulgating safety regulations in retail food establishments, training, certifying, and re-certifying local food inspectors, providing regulatory interpretations and opinions, and acting as consultants to local health officials regarding food-borne disease outbreaks.

The key risk factors for outbreaks of food-borne diseases are the holding and cooking temperatures of the food, personal hygiene of food handlers, cross-contamination of foods via equipment, and the approval status of the food source. (See also Section 10.3, Environmental Health Professions.)

TABLE 8-2. Confirmed and suspected outbreaks of food-borne disease , number

of cases, and populations at risk during CY 1993 (1).


                               No.                 No.     
Etiologic agent             outbreaks     No.    at riska  
cases             

Bacterial, confirmed                                       

Escherichia coli 0157:H7             1        23       166 

Salmonella enteritidis               4        70       163 

Viral, suspected                                           

Norwalk virus                        2       101       726 

Unknown                              3        90       164 

Unknown etiology                     5        67     1,503 

TOTAL                               15       351     2,722 



a Individuals at risk are those who attended the event or ate in the establishment associated with the outbreak or who consumed the suspect food at the event or establishment.

OF NOTE

An estimated 24-80 million cases of food-borne diarrheal disease and person-to-person transfer occur each year in the United States, resulting in about 10,000

deaths (2).

In 1993, an outbreak of Escherichia coli O157:H7, due to insufficiently cooked hamburgers at a fast-food restaurant chain, affected more than 500 people in four western states and caused four deaths (3).

Most food service inspections are performed by local health departments.

REFERENCES

(1) Summary data for CY 1993. Department record. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Health Promotion and Disease Prevention, Environmental Health Division, Food Protection Program, Hartford, CT.

(2) Archer, D.L., and J.E. Kvenberg. 1985. Incidence and cost of food-borne diarrheal disease in the United States. Journal of Food Protection 45: 887-894.

(3) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 1994. Summary of notifiable diseases, United States 1993. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 42(53): 1-73.

8.3 Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention

Lead poisoning occurs after lead paint chips or fine lead dust are swallowed or inhaled. A threshold blood lead concentration of 10 micrograms per deciliter (10 mg/dl) is considered unsafe and indicative of lead poisoning, and requires some type of intervention. The detrimental effects of lead poisoning include impaired growth, developmental delays, learning disabilities, hearing deficits, and behavioral problems.

The Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Program provides technical and financial assistance to local health departments and community agencies, and tracks cases of childhood lead poisoning from the initial screening through medical management and environmental intervention. Effective July 1, 1995, the Program will oversee the mandatory licensing of lead abatement contractors and the mandatory certification of lead inspectors and lead abatement professionals (see Section 10.3, Environmental Health Professions).

TABLE 8-3. Numbers and results of screening and confirmatory tests for lead poisoning completed during CY 1993 (1).


Type of testa                      No. tests   No. positive 
performed         testsb 

Screening (finger stick)              90,213         13,773 

Confirmatory (venous)                 20,077          6,664 



a The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommend that confirmatory (venous) blood

tests be performed when screening levels are 15 mg/dl, and that environmental inspection

of the child's home be performed when confirmatory levels 20 mg/dl are found.

b Blood lead concentration equal to or greater than 10 mg/dl.

OF NOTE

Lead-based paint was banned from residential buildings in 1978. An estimated 64% of Connecticut housing built before 1980 contains lead-based paint (1).

Children's bodies absorb lead in amounts 4 to 5 times greater than those absorbed by adults; they also retain higher levels. High lead levels in adults are not as serious as in children, because the development process has been completed before lead can affect it (2).

Blood lead levels in Americans declined 78% between 1976 and 1991, mainly because of the removal of 99.8% of the lead from gasoline and the removal of lead from soldered food cans and household paints (3).

REFERENCES

(1) Summary data for CY 1993. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Health Promotion and Disease Prevention, Environmental Health Division, Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Program, Hartford, CT.

(2) Gerchufsky, M. 1994. Lead poisoning. Advance for Nurse Practitioners 2(11):15-16, 19, 37.

(3) Brody, D.J., J.L. Pirkle, R.A. Kramer, K.M. Flegal, P.D. Matte, E.W. Gunter, and D.C. Paschal. 1994. Blood lead levels in the United States population. Journal of the American Medical Association 272(4): 277-283.

8.4 Occupational Health Surveillance

Acute and chronic workplace exposures take the lives of an estimated 750-1,700 Connecticut residents annually (1). The DPHAS Occupational Health Surveillance Program (OHSP), in conjunction with the Department of Labor and the Workers Compensation Commission, is responsible for the active surveillance of occupational diseases for which Connecticut workers are at risk. The OHSP seeks to increase awareness and reporting of occupational diseases among the state's health care providers, to identify disease clusters in Connecticut workplaces, to disseminate results, and to seek collaborative, industry-specific interventions that will reduce the incidence of occupational diseases.

TABLE 8-4. Reported numbers of occupational diseases identified in Connecticut during CY 1992 and 1993 (2). Injuries and miscellaneous diseases not included.


Disease                       CY 1992  CY 1993   % Change 

Allergy/dermatitis                 70       83      18.6% 

Chemical exposure                  21      111       429% 

Lead toxicity (adults)a,b         393    2,010       411% 

Occupational cancerc                0        3          - 

Repetitive trauma                                         

Carpal tunnel syndrome             71      121      70.4% 

Hand/arm vibration                 55        8     -85.5% 

Musculoskeletal                    34       32      -5.9% 

Nervous system                     26       15     -42.3% 

Tendonitis                         96       60     -37.5% 

Vibration white finger             34        6     -82.4% 

Other repetitive trauma            79       64     -19.0% 

Respiratory                                               

Asbestosis                         38       11     -71.1% 

Asthmaa                            20       11     -45.0% 

Bronchitis                          7        5     -28.6% 

Pleural plaque                     34        5     -85.3% 

Reactive airway                     2        3      50.0% 

Silicosisa                          1        1         0% 

Other respiratory                   7        2     -71.4% 

TOTAL                             988    2,551       158% 



a Lead poisoning, occupational asthma, and silicosis are reportable diseases.

b On October 1, 1992 the minimum reportable level for blood lead was lowered from 25 mg/dl to

10 mg/dl. (See Section 8.3, Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention for statistics on lead levels

in children.)

c Other cancers are undoubtedly related at least in part to occupation. An estimated 4% of all cancers are related to occupational exposures.

REFERENCES

(1) Connecticut conducts occupational disease surveillance. 1994. Connecticut Epidemiologist 14(4): 13-14.

(2) Occupational disease surveillance system summary data, CYs 1992-1993. Department record. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Environmental Epidemiology and Occupational Health Division, Occupational Health Surveillance Program, Hartford, CT. [Data represent reports from sentinel providers.]

8.5 Radon

Radon is an odorless, colorless gas that arises naturally within the ground from the decay of radioactive elements. The "action level" for home exposure is 4 picocuries of radon per liter of air (4 pCi/L). At least 140 people may die from radon-induced lung cancer each year in Connecticut (1,2). The primary goal of the DPHAS Radon Program is to reduce the estimated annual mortality by increasing levels of radon awareness through extensive outreach and education, and by promoting radon testing, mitigation, and use of radon-resistant techniques in new construction. (See also Section 10.3, Environmental Health Professions.)

TABLE 8-5. Percent of Connecticut population that was aware of radon, tested for radon, and mitigated radon problems during SFY 1993 and SFY 1994 (1,3), and cumulative numbers of schools tested for radon as of December 31, 1993 and

December 31, 1994 (1,4).


                                          Year         

Factor                               1993       1994    

CT population aware of radon           80.2%      84.2% 

CT population tested for radon         18.0%      23.4% 

CT population that mitigated            2.7%       4.1% 
radon problems                                          

Schools tested                           139        205 



OF NOTE

The average radon level in American homes is 1.25 pCi/L, and 6 million homes have levels of 4 pCi/L and above (5).

In Connecticut, the average living area level is 1.3 pCi/L, and an estimated 125,000 homes have levels at or above 4 pCi/L (2).

REFERENCES

(1) 1993 and 1994 Department Records. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Health Promotion and Disease Prevention, Environmental Epidemiology and Occupational Health Division, Radon Program, Hartford, CT.

(2) Siniscalchi, A.J., S.J. Tibbetts, A. Mahmood, X. Soto, Z.F. Dembek, R.C. Beakes, M.A. Thomas, and N.F. McHone. In press. Multicomponent health risk assessment of Connecticut homes with multiple pathway radon exposure. In: Proceedings of Indoor Air: An Integrated Approach, An International Workshop. Elsevier Science, Ltd., Oxford, U.K.

(3) Siniscalchi, A.J., A. Mahmood, R.C. Beakes, X. Soto, Z.F. Dembek, and G.D. Ferree, Jr. 1994. Radon awareness in Connecticut: comparison of two statewide residential surveys and their use in setting numerical target goals for increasing awareness, testing and mitigation for the years 1995 and 2000. In: Proceedings of the 1994 International Radon Symposium. Omnipress Inc., Madison, WI, pp. II 5.1-5.10.

(4) Siniscalchi, A.J., Z.F. Dembek, S.J. Tibbetts, X. Soto, R.C. Beakes, A. Mahmood, and A.W. Hantman. 1994. Radon in school well water: case studies and mitigation implications. In: Proceedings of the 1994 International Radon Symposium. Omnipress Inc., Madison, WI, pp. VII 2.1-2.9.

(5) US Environmental Protection Agency. 1992. Technical support document for the 1992 citizens guide to radon. EPA 400-R-92-011. US Government Printing Office, Washington, DC.

8.6 Recreational Health and Safety

The mission of the Recreational Health and Safety Program is to protect the health, safety, and well-being of persons participating in recreational activities in Connecticut. The program performs three primary functions to carry out its mission: it licenses and inspects day and residential youth camps annually (see also Section 11.4, Day and Residential Youth Camps); it provides assistance to the Department of Environmental Protection to ensure safe bathing water at state parks; and it approves plans for the construction and repair of public swimming pools.

TABLE 8-6. Summary statistics for Recreational Health and Safety

Program, including injuries to persons attending licensed youth

camps in Connecticut during CY 1993 (1).


                                   Number   
Activity or health indicator         or     
percent  

Youth camps                                 

Total licensed and opened               308 

Total attendees                      96,349 

Inspections performed                       

Preliminary                              39 

Regulatory                              303 

Re-inspections                            1 

Violations observed at regular              
inspectionsa                                

Non-major                               122 

Major                                   134 

Percent of camps with major             43% 
violations                                  

Attendee injuries                           

Broken bones                             56 

Lacerations                              24 

Other (concussion, allergic              49 
reaction, etc.)                             

Fatalities                                0 

Public swimming pools                       

Plans reviewed                           36 

Site inspections performed                2 

Other                                       

Outbreaks of foodborne disease            0 



a No violations were found during re-inspections.

OF NOTE

Connecticut has been licensing youth camps since 1969.

REFERENCE

(1) Summary data for SFY 1993. Department records. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Environmental Health Division, Recreational Health and Safety Program, Hartford, CT

8.7 On-site Sewage Disposal and Groundwater Control

The primary function of the On-site Sewage Disposal Section is to protect surface and underground water supplies by ensuring proper treatment and disposal of domestic sewage that is generated by approximately one third of Connecticut's residents.

Section staff train and certify town sanitarians, certify sewage disposal inspectors, license septic system cleaners and installers (see Section 10.3, Environmental Health Professions), and review plans for sewage disposal systems. The section also reviews and approves plans for all public crematories, mausoleums, and private burial grounds.

TABLE 8-7. Activities of the On-site Sewage Disposal Section

during SFY 1994 (1).


Activity                             Number   

Plans for sewage disposal systems             
reviewed                                      

Large systems (2,000 gallons)              28 

Small systems (<2,000 gallons)            147 

Exceptionsa                               265 

Mausoleums approved                         2 

Crypts approved                           648 

Crematories approved                        1 

Private burial grounds approved             0 



a Exceptions include wells, easements, and central systems.

OF NOTE

Double-depth burials are not prohibited by statute or regulation in Connecticut, but are generally limited to cemeteries with no shallow ground water or ledge rock.

Public Act 93-279, Sec. 19 allows multiple interment of fetal remains within a common hospital container, provided that consent forms for disposition of remains have been obtained.

Approximately 35% of Connecticut households are served by on-site sewage disposal systems; most permits for residential systems are processed by local health departments.

REFERENCE

(1) Summary data for SFY 1994 (provisional). Department record. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Environmental Health Services Division, On-site Sewage Disposal Section, Hartford, CT.

8.8 Water Supplies

The primary goal of the Water Supplies Section of the Environmental Health Services Division is to ensure a safe, adequate supply of drinking water, by reducing or eliminating the threat of bacteriological and chemical contamination and by developing and coordinating water supply planning activities. (See also Section 10.3, Environmental Health Professions.)

TABLE 8-8. Surveys and reviews performed, permits granted and denied,

and enforcement actions initiated and resolved during SFY 1994 by the Water

Supplies Section (1).


Activity                                    Number   

Sanitary surveys performed                           

Community                                        238 

Non-community                                    114 

Reviews performed                                    

Community water quality reports                3,736 

Plans and specifications                         297 

Community systems annual watershed                38 
reports                                              

Community systems annual cross-connection         84 
reports                                              

Individual water supply plans                  24/12 
reviewed/approved                                    

Well exception permits granted/denied          27/20 

Formal enforcement actions                     99/93 
initiated/resolved                                   



OF NOTE

About 85% of Connecticut residents obtain their drinking water from community public water systems, and 82% of the state's population drinks fluoridated water.

Connecticut was the second state in the nation to achieve primacy, that is, primary responsibility for drinking water regulations in the State. DPHAS is the State's primacy agency for the US Environmental Protection Agency.

Connecticut and Rhode Island are the only states in the United States that prohibit the discharge of waste materials into sources of drinking water.

REFERENCE

(1) Provisional summary data for SFY 1994. Department records. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Environmental Health Services Division, Water Supplies Section, Hartford, CT.
 

9 LABORATORY SERVICES

State Laboratory Services

Biological Sciences

Laboratory Standards and Clinical Chemistry

Environmental Chemistry

Toxicology and Criminology
 


9.1 State Laboratory Services

The DPHAS Bureau of Laboratory Services, also known as the State Health Laboratory, is a centralized resource for state and local health and law enforcement agencies, hospitals, physicians, and licensed and registered laboratories. The Health Laboratory provides data and other surveillance information used for the assessment of human and environmental health issues, and also provides the judicial system with data from the analysis of evidence in criminal cases.

The Laboratory does not duplicate work that can be performed less expensively and more readily in the private sector. Rather, it focuses on procedures needed for compliance with federal and state laws, for surveillance of infectious and genetic diseases, and for emergency response. It also provides laboratory services unavailable elsewhere, including investigations that assure the quality of clinical, environmental, and public health laboratory tests performed by licensed and registered laboratories throughout Connecticut.

The Bureau of Laboratory Services has four divisions: Biological Sciences; Laboratory Standards and Clinical Chemistry; Environmental Chemistry; and Toxicology and Criminology.

9.2 Biological Sciences Division

The Biological Sciences Division tests human specimens, milk, and water for the presence of bacterial, viral, fungal, and parasitic agents of public health significance.

TABLE 9-1. Tests performed by the Biological Sciences Division

during SFY 1993 (1). Specimens for rabies tests were of animal

origin; all others were from human sources.


Type of specimen or test      No. specimens  

Bacteriology                          40,256 

Nasopharyngeal specimens                 492 

Streptococcus, Group A                    20 

Pertussis                                254 

Legionellosis                            218 

Mycobacteria specimens                 4,991 

Enteric specimens                      1,668 

Gonococcus specimens                  23,908 

Anaerobic specimens                       38 

Other bacteriology                     9,159 
specimensa                                   

Mycology                               1,888 

Parasitology                           1,090 

Intestinal specimens                   1,043 

Malaria specimens                         47 



Table 9-1 continues.

TABLE 9-1. (Continued.)


Type of specimen or test       No. specimens  

Virology                               10,058 

Rabies specimens                        3,707 

Viral isolation specimens               2,162 

Herpes simplex specimens                3,803 

Clostridium difficile toxin               386 

Immunology and Serology               101,259 

Syphilis serology specimens            15,938 

Bacterial serology specimens            2,994 

Legionellosis                           1,555 

Lyme disease                            1,439 

Parasitic serology                      1,459 
specimensb                                    

Viral & rickettsial serology           13,247 
specimensc                                    

HIV serology specimens                 67,385 

Parvovirus B19 specimens                  236 



a Includes 8,831 specimens analyzed for Chlamydia, 15 other genital specimens, and 313

aerobic reference cultures.

b All specimens for toxoplasmosis identification.

c Includes specimens for the identification of mycoplasma, Epstein Barr virus (associated

with the disease infectious mononucleosis), hepatitis A, hepatitis B, and rubella; excludes

human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).

TABLE 9-2. Microbiological tests performed on water, wastewater

and sewage by Environmental Microbiology, and on dairy, food, and

beverage samples by the Biological Sciences Division during SFY 1993 (1).


Type of specimen or test        No. samples   

Water samples                          14,098 

Potable water                           4,823 

Non-potable water                       9,218 

Shellfish seawater                      6,486 

Other non-potable water                 2,732 

Sewage and waste                           57 

Dairy products samplesa                 1,908 

Food and beverage samplesb                698 



a Includes milk, cream, ice cream, cheese, frozen desserts, other dairy products, plant equipment,

and empty containers.

b Includes seafood and food samples from suspected food-associated disease outbreaks and samples

for determination of food quality.

9.3 Laboratory Standards and Clinical Chemistry

The Division of Laboratory Standards and Clinical Chemistry has three sections. The Newborn Screening Section performs seven tests for inborn metabolic abnormalities on every infant born in Connecticut. The Biochemistry Section screens blood samples for evidence of lead poisoning and Tay-Sachs disease. The Laboratory Standards Section inspects clinical facilities and certifies environmental laboratories to test the environment for contaminants. The Section's Safety, Security, and Training Office plans, organizes, and coordinates programs for DPHAS lab personnel, inspects the laboratories, and educates staff on selected topics.

TABLE 9-3. Tests performed by the Laboratory Standards

and Clinical Chemistry Division during SFY 1993 (1,2).


Type of test           No. tests     

Newborn screeninga           233,608 

Tay-Sachs disease                337 

Blood lead                   104,985 

    Screening                 87,894 

    Confirmation              17,091 

Phenylalanine                    418 



a Includes tests for phenylketonuria, tyrosinemia, galactosemia, hypothyroidism,

and hemoglobinopathy.

9.4 Environmental Chemistry

The Environmental Chemistry Division supports state and local agencies for testing environmental contaminants, and is a regional technical support laboratory for the US Environmental Protection Agency. Chemical analyses for organics, inorganics or radioactivity are performed on samples such as river and lake waters, air, drinking waters, wastewaters, landfills, industrial wastes, spills, fish and shellfish, consumer products, and soils.

TABLE 9-4. Laboratory analyses performed by the Environmental

Chemistry Division during SFY 1993 (1)


Type of sample or test           No. samples   

Potable water                           13,270 

Synthetic organic chemicals              5,502 

Pesticides and herbicides                1,052 

Inorganic chemicals                      5,650 

Radionuclides                            1,066 



Table 9-4 continues.

TABLE 9-4. (Continued.)


Type of sample or test           No. samples   

Ambient water                            3,659 

Synthetic organic chemicals                 50 

Pesticides and herbicides                   22 

Inorganic chemicals                      2,801 

Radionuclides                              786 

Solid and hazardous waste                1,901 

Synthetic organic chemicals              1,901 

Food                                       442 

Synthetic organic chemicals                  3 

Pesticides and herbicides                  140 

Inorganic chemicals                        170 

Radionuclides                              129 

Air pollution                            6,145 

Radiological analysis                    2,225 

Air, water, milk, food, soil,            2,096 
wipes                                          

Fish, shellfish, vegetation,               129 
charcoal filter                                

Occupational safety and                    112 
health                                         

Samples for asbestos                        42 

Environmental samples                       70 

Othera                                  11,037 



a Includes lead in wipes and soil, and asbestos in soil.

9.5 Toxicology and Criminology

The Division of Toxicology and Criminology analyzes evidence submitted by local and state police. The material may be evidence from cases of arson, rape, drug abuse, or driving while under the influence of alcohol or drugs, or from consumer protection cases (such as suspected poisoning of foods or pharmaceuticals).

TABLE 9-5. Forensic laboratory analyses performed by the Toxicology

and Criminology Division during SFY 1993 (1).


Type of sample or test              No. samples    

TOTAL SAMPLES                               37,676 

Biological samples                          12,272 

Ethyl alcohol                                5,636 

In blood                                     2,159 

In urine                                     3,477 

Drugs and narcotics in urine                 5,167 

Blood typing                                 1,469 

Physical samples                            25,404 

Liquids for alcohol                            349 

Plant and plant material                     8,435 
(including marijuana)                              

Drugs and narcotics                         11,601 

Articles for blood stains                    2,004 

Fibers and hairs                             1,169 

Clothing for seminal stains                  1,846 



REFERENCES

(1) Consolidated annual report to the Association of State and Territorial Public Health Laboratory Directors for SFY 1993. 1994. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Laboratory Services, Hartford, CT.

(2) Annual report for SFY 1992-1993. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Hartford, CT, p. 23-26.
 


10 HEALTH PROFESSIONALS

Medical and Other Health Service Professions

Emergency Medical Service Professions

Environmental Health Professions
 


10.1 Medical and Other Health Service Professions

The Bureau of Health Systems Regulation, Division of Medical Quality Assurance (MQA), licenses 31 medical and health-related professions and is responsible for certifying three professions and registering one profession. The Applications and Examinations Section of MQA receives, reviews, and approves all applications, in collaboration with 16 licensing boards or commissions. MQA's Public Health Hearing Office receives, investigates, and resolves complaints against regulated health professionals.

TABLE 10-1. Numbers of licensed, registered, and certifieda medical professionals

in Connecticut as of December 31, 1993 (1).


                           New in           Percent          

Profession                  1993      Total    of    Ratiob  
total           

Chiropractors                   83      812     0.7%    24.8 

Dental hygienists              138    2,807     2.6%    85.6 

Dentistsc                      121    2,819     2.6%    86.0 

Homeopaths                       1       30     0.0%     0.9 

Licensed practical             616   10,851    10.0%     331 
nurses                                                       

Marriage & family               27      481     0.4%    14.7 
therapistsa                                                  

Naturopaths                     12       79     0.1%     2.4 

Nurse aidesa                 5,709   27,874    25.6%     851 

Nurse-midwives                   8       84     0.1%     2.6 

Occupational therapists         90      784     0.7%    23.9 

Occupational therapy            43      181     0.2%     5.5 
assistants                                                   

Optometrists                    32      598     0.5%    18.2 

Osteopaths                      28      129     0.1%     3.9 

Physical therapists            202    2,708     2.5%    82.6 

Physician assistants           409      409     0.4%    12.5 

Physicians/surgeons            772   11,041    10.1%     337 

Podiatrists                     22      342     0.3%    10.4 

Psychologists                   85    1,185     1.1%    36.2 

Registered nurses            2,198   45,024    41.3%   1,374 

Registered nurses,             154      694     0.6%    21.2 
advanced practice                                            

Respiratory care                 5       41     0.0%     1.3 
practitionersa                                               

Total medical               10,755  108,973     100%    -    
professionals                                                



a Marriage and family therapists and respiratory care practitioners are certified but not licensed.

Nurse aides are registered but not licensed. All other professionals are licensed. Licenses are

renewed annually or biennially. As certification and registration programs have no renewal

process, the data represent cumulative total numbers of these "credentialed" individuals.

b Ratio = number of professionals per 100,000 population, based on 1993 Connecticut population

estimate of 3,277,310 (2).

c As of August 16, 1994, 5 dentists were licensed separately for conscious sedation and 134 dentists

were licensed for general anesthesia and conscious sedation.

TABLE 10-2. Numbers of licensed or certifieda health professionals (other than medical professionals) in Connecticut as of December 31, 1993 (1).


                           New in           Percent          

Profession                  1993      Total    of    Ratiob  
total           

Audiologists                     7      164     0.5%     5.0 

Barbers                         54    2,189     6.8%    66.8 

Embalmers                       15      806     2.5%    24.6 

Funeral directors                0      128     0.4%     3.9 

Hairdressers/Cosmeticians    1,146   21,754    67.9%     664 

Hearing aid dealers             12      190     0.6%     5.8 

Hypertrichologists              15      235     0.7%     7.2 

Nursing home                    42      827     2.6%    25.2 
administrators                                               

Opticians                       49      525     1.6%    16.0 

Social workersa                209    3,016     9.4%    92.0 

Speech pathologists            118    1,415     4.4%    43.2 

Veterinarians                   53      769     2.4%    23.5 

TOTAL                        1,720   32,018     100%    -    



a Social workers are certified but not licensed. All other professionals are licensed. Licenses are

renewed annually or biennially. As certification and registration programs have no renewal

process, the data represent cumulative total numbers of credentialed individuals.

b Ratio = number of professionals per 100,000 population, based on 1993 Connecticut population

estimate of 3,277,310. (2)

TABLE 10-3. Numbers of complaints received by Public Health Hearings Office in

CY 1993, frequency of complaints, and disciplinary actions taken (1). Professions

are listed in order of frequency of complaints.


                               Complaints         Disciplin 
ary    

No.   Percent             actions  
Profession             receive received Frequency  takenb   
d                     a           

Veterinarians               32     3.5%      4.16         4 

Dentists                   113    12.4%      4.01         7 

Naturopaths                  3     0.3%      3.80         1 

Podiatrists                 12     1.3%      3.51      3(1) 

Chiropractors               26     2.9%      3.20      3(1) 

Hearing aid dealers          6     0.7%      3.16         0 

Funeral directors            4     0.4%      3.13         1 

Physicians/surgeons        288    31.6%      2.61     36(5) 

Embalmers                   14     1.5%      1.74         4 

Optometrists                10     1.1%      1.67         0 

Osteopaths                   2     0.2%      1.55         0 

Nursing home                11     1.2%      1.33         1 
administrators                                              

Psychologists                9     1.0%      0.76         1 

Nurse aides                156    17.1%      0.56     13(4) 

Licensed practical          50     5.5%      0.46        15 
nurses                                                      



Table 10-3 continues

TABLE 10-3. (Continued.)


                                   Complaints        Disciplin 
ary    

Number  Percent            actions  
Profession                 receive         Frequency  takenb   
d    receive         a           
d                        

Opticians                        2    0.2%      0.38         1 

Subsurface sewage                8    0.9%      0.32         5 
installers                                                     

Social workers                   7    0.8%      0.23         2 

Marriage & family                1    0.1%      0.21         2 
therapists                                                     

Registered nurses               81    8.9%      0.18     48(1) 

Registered nurses,               1    0.1%      0.14         0 
advanced practice                                              

Physical therapists              3    0.3%      0.11         0 

Hairdressers/Cosmeticians       21    2.3%      0.10         8 

Barbers                          2    0.2%      0.09         2 

Dental hygienists                1    0.1%      0.04         1 

Audiologists                     0      0%         0         0 

Homeopaths                       0      0%         0         0 

Hypertrichologists               0      0%         0         0 

Nurse-midwives                   0      0%         0         0 

Occupational therapists          0      0%         0         0 

Occupational therapy             0      0%         0         0 
assistants                                                     

Physician assistants             0      0%         0         0 

Respiratory care                 0      0%         0         0 
practitioners                                                  

Sanitarians                      0      0%         0         0 

Speech pathologists              0      0%         0         1 



Other                                                          

Unlicensed persons              44    4.8%       N/A         6 

Resident physicians              5    0.5%       N/A         0 



Total                          912    100%         -       165 



a Frequency = Number of complaints per 100 licensees.

b The number of actions taken includes cases dismissed by a Board or Hearing officer after hearing.

Cases dismissed are shown in parenthesis.

OF NOTE

Since the Hearing Office was established in 1978, complaints have increased more than ten-fold, and disciplinary actions have increased by a factor of 8. Six out of every ten complaints are filed against physicians/surgeons, nurse aides, or dentists.

Consumer satisfaction, measured by relative frequency of complaints, is greatest for speech pathologists and occupational therapists and lowest for veterinarians and dentists.

MQA collected more than $13 million in individual licensing fees in SFY 1993, all of which went into the State's general fund.

Five professions (registered nurses, hairdressers, nurse aids, physicians, and licensed practical nurses) accounted for 83% of all licenses held.

New programs for licensing physician assistants and massage therapists were implemented in 1993-1994.

[See end of Section 10.3 for References.]

10.2 Emergency Medical Service Professions

The Office of Emergency Medical Services (OEMS) is the lead agency for the statewide development of emergency medical services. OEMS is responsible for developing the State EMS Plan, enforcing EMS regulations, and providing technical assistance on all aspects of emergency medical services. The OEMS, in conjunction with the State EMS Advisory Board and Regional EMS Councils, is developing a statewide trauma system, data system, and replacement for the statewide EMS communication system. OEMS also administers the DPHAS emergency response duties and maintains a 24-hour point-of-contact for public health emergencies.

OEMS certifies four categories of emergency medical personnel, with re-certification required every 24 to 36 months, and also licenses ambulance providers. OEMS has a process for complaint reporting, investigation, and resolution.

TABLE 10-4. Emergency medical personnel certified by OEMS as of

December 2, 1993. During SFY 1993, the Office approved 566 emergency medical care training programs (3).


Profession                           Number    Ratioa   

Medical Response Technician (MRT)b      5,197       159 

Emergency Medical Technician           11,690       357 
(EMT)c                                                  

Intermediate Emergency Medical          1,214        37 
Techniciand                                             

Paramedic Emergency Medical               861        26 
Techniciane                                             

TOTAL                                  18,962       579 



a Ratio = number of professionals per 100,000 population, based on 1993 Connecticut population estimate of 3,277,310 (2).

b The MRT is the "first responder," who provides the emergency medical care needed until emergency medical technicians arrive.

c The basic level EMT generally staffs ambulances and provides basic life support skills. The training program is 120 hours.

d The Intermediate EMT, working under the direction of a physician through radio communication, provides advanced medical skills (e.g. advanced airway care, administration of intravenous fluids). Additional training of 65-80 hours above the basic EMT program is required.

e The Paramedic EMT works under a physician's direction through radio communication and provides a higher level of medical care, including administration of drugs, defibrillation of cardiac arrhythmia,, and intubation. The course involves about 600 to 1,000 hours of instruction, clinical and field internships.

TABLE 10-5. Types of ambulance providers licensed by

OEMS as of December 31, 1993 (3).


Type of provider             Number   

Volunteer associations             76 

Volunteer fire departments         56 

Other volunteer (school,            3 
racetrack)                            

Municipal fire departments         14 

Industrial/other fire               9 
departments                           

Commercial services                29 

Other private (EMS                  4 
foundations)                          

Hospital-based                     10 

Police-based                        1 

TOTAL                             202 



TABLE 10-6. Complaints received and disciplinary actions taken against emergency medical personnel and ambulance companies during CY 1993 (3).


                                                       No.     
No.     disciplina 
Profession/Provider                     Complaints      ry     
actions   

Medical Response Technician (MRT)                 1          1 

Emergency Medical Technician (EMT)                5          5 

Intermediate Emergency Medical                    1          1 
Technician (EMT-I)                                             

Paramedic Emergency Medical Technician            2          1 
(EMT-P)                                                        

Ambulance Companies                              13          4 

Othera                                            1          1 

TOTAL                                            23         13 



a One complaint, made against an uncertified EMT, was turned over to the local police department

(i.e., criminal impersonation).

OF NOTE

Connecticut was the third state in the nation to implement a statewide enhanced

911 emergency telephone system, which automatically provides caller information (telephone number and street address) at the answering station.

Every municipality in Connecticut is covered by a designated basic life support ambulance, and pre-hospital advanced life support care is available to more than 80% of Connecticut residents.

The statewide EMS communication network links more than 500 field units with 37 emergency medical facilities.

Connecticut has two "Lifestar" aeromedical helicopters that provide both advance scene care and rapid inter-facility transfer of critically ill or injured patients.

[See end of Section 10.3 for References.]

10.3 Environmental Health Professions

Various divisions and programs under the aegis of the DPHAS Bureau of Health Promotion and Disease Prevention are responsible for the licensing and credentialing of professionals who work in several areas of environmental health.

TABLE 10-7. Environmental professionals currently licensed or credentialed by divisions and programs within the DPHAS Bureau of Health Promotion (4). Dates are specified in footnotes.


                                   No.      No.      No.   
Profession                       licensed certifie  other  
d             

Asbestos abatement contractorsa        30        -       - 

Asbestos consultantsa                   0        -       - 

Food inspectorsb                        -      347       - 

Lead abatement contractorsc            28        -       - 

Lead inspectors and                     -      164       - 
professionalsc                                             

Radon diagnostic and mitigation                         16 
contractorsd                                               

Radon air and water testerse                            44 

Sewage disposal, Phase I                       347         
inspectorsf                                                

Sewage disposal, Phase II                      273         
inspectorsf                                                

Subsurface sewage cleanersf           166                  

Subsurface sewage installersf       2,386                  

Registered sanitariansf               363                  

Water treatment plant                          378         
operatorsg                                                 

Water distribution system                      430         
operatorsg                                                 

Cross-connection control                       323         
officersg                                                  



a Licenses issued by the Environmental Health Division, Asbestos Program as of

September 21, 1994 (4). Licensing of asbestos contractors and consultants became mandatory in

June, 1994.

b Certifications issued by Food Protection Program as of December 19, 1994 (5).

c Licensed or certified with non-mandatory license or certification program as of September 29, 1994. Mandatory licensing by Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Program begins July 1, 1995 (6).

d Number of individuals listed with the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Radon

Contractor Proficiency Program as of October 24, 1994. Nine companies also are EPA-listed.

e Number of individuals listed with the US EPA Radon Proficiency Program as of November 1, 1994. Thirty-nine companies also are EPA-listed (7).

f Licenses issued through the Environmental Health Division, On-site Sewage Disposal Section as of August 14, 1994 (8).

g Certified by the Environmental Health Division, Water Supplies Section as of July 1, 1994 (9).

REFERENCES (for Sections 10.1-10.3)

(1) Annual report of activities, 1993. 1994. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Health Systems Regulation, Division of Medical Quality Assurance, Hartford, CT.

(2) Estimated populations in Connecticut as of July 1, 1993. 1994. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Office of Strategic Planning and Information Services, Health Research and Data Analysis Unit, Hartford, CT.

(3) Provisional summary data for CY 1993 and SFY 1993. Department record. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Office of Emergency Medical Services. Hartford, CT.

(4) Provisional summary data for FFY 1994. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Health Promotion and Disease Prevention, Environmental Health Division, Asbestos Program, Hartford, CT.

(5) Provisional summary data for CY 1994. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Health Promotion and Disease Prevention, Environmental Health Division, Food Protection Program, Hartford, CT.

(6) Provisional summary data for FFY 1994. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Health Promotion and Disease Prevention, Environmental Health Division, Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Program, Hartford, CT.

(7) Department records. 1994. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Health Promotion and Disease Prevention, Environmental Epidemiology and Occupational Health Division, Radon Program, Hartford, CT.

(8) Department records. 1994. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Health Promotion and Disease Prevention, Environmental Health Division, On-site Sewage Disposal Section, Hartford, CT.

(9) Department records. 1994. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Health Promotion and Disease Prevention, Environmental Health Division, Water Supplies Section, Hartford, CT.
 


11 FACILITIES

Long-term Care Facilities, Acute Care and Chronic Disease Hospitals, Outpatient Clinics, Home Health Care Agencies

Mental Health and Substance Abuse Facilities

Well-child Clinics, Day Care Centers, and Day Care Homes

Day and Residential Youth Camps

Funeral Homes and Optical Establishments

Laboratories
 


11.1 Long-term Care Facilities, Acute Care and Chronic

Disease Hospitals, Outpatient Clinics, Home Health

Care Agencies, and Specialty Facilities

TABLE 11-1. Numbers and sizes of licensed long-term care facilities, hospitals, outpatient clinics, home health care agencies, and other facilities in Connecticut, as

of September 30, 1994 (1,2).


                                          Licensed  Licensed  
Type of facility                  Number           bassinets  
                                            beds              

Chronic & convalescent nursing                                
homes (CCNH)a                                                 

Freestanding CCNH                     168   18,827            

CCNH with attached RHNSb               85    9,081            

Total CCNHs                           253   27,908            

Rest homes with nursing                                       
supervision (RHNS)                                            

Freestanding RHNS                      18    1,165            

RHNS attached to CCNH                  85    3,100            

Total RHNSs                           103    4,265            

Homes for the aged                    119    3,085            

Outpatient                                                    

Outpatient clinics                    120      N/A            

Outpatient HMOs                        14      N/A            

Total outpatient clinics              134      N/A            

Home health care agencies            114c      N/A            

Specialty facilities                                          

Acute care (general)  hospitals        34   10,348        883 

Ambulatory surgical units              10      N/A            

Children's hospitals                    1       98            

Chronic disease hospitals               6      811            

Hemodialysis units (outpatient)         9      N/A            

Hospices                               1        52            

Maternity homes                         1       16         16 



a Also known as skilled nursing facilities (SNFs).

b Rest Homes with Nursing Supervision.

c Licensed as of June 30, 1993.

REFERENCES

(1) Monthly data report for September, 1994. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Hospital and Medical Care Division, Hartford, CT.

(2) Home health care agency annual licensure renewal applications for SFY 1993. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Health System Regulation, Hospital and Medical Care Division, Hartford, CT.

11.2 Mental Health and Substance Abuse Facilities

TABLE 11-2. Numbers and sizes of licensed mental health and substance

abuse facilities in Connecticut as of September 30, 1994 (1).


                                        Licensed 
Type of facility                Number           
beds   

Psychiatric hospitals                 6      432 

Psychiatric outpatient               99      N/A 
clinics                                          

Mental health day treatments          8      N/A 

Mental health intermediate            1        8 
treatments                                       

Mental health residential            17      166 
living centers                                   

Mental health community               8       64 
residences                                       

Substance abuse and                  98    1,428 
dependence facilities                            



REFERENCE

(1) Monthly data report for September, 1994. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Division of Hospital and Medical Care, Hartford, CT.

11.3 Well-child Clinics, Day Care Centers, and Day Care Homes

TABLE 11-3. Numbers of licensed well child clinics, day

care centers and group day care homes, and family day care

homes in Connecticut as of September 30, 1994 (1).


Type of facility                   Number 

Well-child clinics                     93 

Day care center & group day         1,562 
care homes                                

Family day care homes               5,494 



REFERENCE

(1) Summary data for SFY 1994 (provisional). State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Health System Regulation, Community Nursing/Day Care Licensing Division. Hartford, CT.

11.4 Day and Residential Youth Camps

TABLE 11-4. Numbers of licensed for-profit

and not-for-profit day and residential youth

camps in Connecticut as of December 31, 1993 (1).


Type of camp           Number   

Day camps                       

For profit                   30 

Not for profit              171 

Residential camps               

For profit                   50 

Not for profit               57 

TOTAL                       308 



REFERENCE

(1) Summary data for CY 1993 (provisional). State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Environmental Health Division, Recreational Health and Safety Program, Hartford, CT.

11.5 Funeral Homes and Optical Establishments

TABLE 11-5. Numbers of licensed funeral homes and optical establishments in Connecticut, and complaints received and acted upon by the Public Health Hearing Office as of December 31, 1993 (1).


                      No.         No.          No.      
Type of facility    licensed  (frequency)  disciplinary 
of          actions   
complaintsa     taken     

Funeral homes            314      5 (1.59)            1 

Optical                  203      2 (0.99)            0 
establishments                                          



a Frequency - Number of complaints per 100 licenses.

REFERENCE

(1) Annual report of activities, 1993. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Health Systems Regulation, Division of Medical Quality Assurance, Hartford, CT.

11.6 Laboratories

TABLE 11-6. Numbers of laboratories licensed, registered, approved, or certified by the DPHAS Bureau of Laboratory Services as of June 30, 1993a (1).


                          No. licensed      No.       No.    
Type of laboratory         or permits    registered certifie 
approved                   db    

Clinical                             254                 176 

Public health                          6         45        6 

Physician's office                                     1,800 

Dairy                                  5                     

Food                                  12                     

Water                                237                     

    Drinking water                  197c                     

    Other water                      40c                     

    Microbiology                      14                     

    Chemistry                        153                     

    Microbiology and                  70                     
chemistry                                                    



a Laboratories located both in Connecticut and other states are included.

b Laboratories certified in accordance with the Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments

of 1988 (CLIA).

c Includes total number of licensed, registered, approved, or certified laboratories.

REFERENCE

(1) Consolidated annual report to the Association of State and Territorial Public Health Laboratory Directors for SFY 1993. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Laboratory Services, Hartford, CT.
 


12 HEALTH CARE DELIVERY

Local Health Departments

School-based Health Centers

Community Health Centers

Sexual Assault Crisis Services

Acute Care

Home Health Care

Long-term Care
 


12.1 Local Health Departments

The mission of the Office of Local Health Administration at DPHAS is to assure universal access to quality local public health services in each community in the state.

Health districts and municipalities that provide full-time public health services currently receive between $ 0.52 and $1.78 per capita (depending on population) in state subsidies, to encourage local capacity building and augment local services.

TABLE 12-1. Full-time and part-time services provided by local health departments and local health districts, and percentages of Connecticut's population served by them. Data are for SFY 1994 (1).


                      No. of    Population serveda  

Services provided  municipaliti   Number    Percent  
es                      

Full-time                                            
services                                             

Individual                   30  1,605,050      48.9 

Districts                   75b    976,850      29.8 

Total                       105  2,581,900      78.7 



Part-time                   73c    697,440      21.3 
services                                             



a Based on 1992 individual town population estimates, and a State population estimate of

3,279,340 (2).

b Includes the City of Groton and Boroughs of Bantam, Litchfield, Newtown, and Danielson.

c Includes the Boroughs of Fenwick, Jewett City, Stonington, and Woodmont.

As of July 1, 1994, the following individual cities and towns had their own local health departments: Bethel; Berlin; Bloomfield; Bridgeport; Danbury; East Hartford; Fairfield; Glastonbury; Greenwich; Hartford; Manchester; Meriden; Middletown; Milford; New Britain; New Fairfield; New Haven; New London; New Milford; Norwalk; Old Lyme; Stamford; Stratford; Waterbury; West Hartford; West Haven; Wethersfield; Wilton; Windham; and Windsor. The constituent towns in Connecticut's health districts are listed in Table 12-2.

TABLE 12-2. Connecticut's local health districts as of July 1, 1994 (1).


Health district      Constituent towns               
(HD)                                                 

Bristol-Burlington   Bristol, Burlington             
HD                                                   

Chesprocott HD       Cheshire, Prospect, Watertown,  
                     Wolcott                         

East Shore HD        Branford, East Haven, North     
                     Branford                        

Farmington Valley    Avon, Barkhamsted, Canton,      
HD                   Colebrook, East Granby,         
                     Farmington, Granby, Hartland,   
                     New Hartford, Simsbury          

Ledge Light HD       City of Groton, Town of Groton  

Naugatuck Valley HD  Ansonia, Beacon Falls, Derby,   
                     Naugatuck, Seymour, Shelton     

Newtown HD           Borough of Newtown, Town of     
                     Newtown                         

North Central HD     East Windsor, Ellington,        
                     Enfield, Suffield, Vernon,      
                     Windsor Locks                   

Northeast HD         Ashford, Brooklyn, Canterbury,  
                     Eastford, Hampton, Killingly,   
                     Plainfield, Pomfret, Putnam,    
                     Sterling, Thompson, Woodstock   

Pomperaug HD         Oxford, Southbury, Woodbury     

Quinnipiack Valley   Hamden, North Haven,            
HD                   Woodbridge                      

Stafford HD          Stafford, Union                 

Torrington Area HD   Bethlehem, Cornwall, Goshen,    
                     Harwinton, Kent, Litchfield,    
                     Morris, Norfolk, Salisbury,     
                     Thomaston, Torrington, Warren,  
                     Winchester                      

Uncas Regional HD    Montville, Norwich              

Weston-Westport HD   Weston, Westport                



OF NOTE

As of July 1, 1994, eight out of ten Connecticut residents, the largest proportion ever, had access to a full-time local health department.

REFERENCES

(1) Summary data for SFY 1994. Department records. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Office of Local Health Administration, Hartford, CT.

(2) Estimated populations in Connecticut as of July 1, 1992. 1993. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Health Surveillance and Planning Division, Health Status Data and Analysis Unit, Hartford, CT.

12.2 School-based Health Centers

School-based health centers (SBHCs) are licensed outpatient clinics that deliver primary health care and mental health services within a school building. In SFY 1994, DPHAS funded 29 centers in 11 cities and towns.

Each center is staffed by an advanced practice registered nurse and a social worker, both with clinical supervision and back-up, and a coordinator. Additional health or allied health professionals may also be employed, depending on school and community need. SBHCs provide services via collaboration between a local health and/or mental health agency and the school system. Students must have a parental permission slip on file before receiving services. Services are provided to all children regardless of ability to pay.

TABLE 12-3. Locations and settings of school-based health centers funded

by the Department of Public Health and Addiction Services in SFY 1994a (1).


                       Type of schoolb          

City           ECC    PK-8   Elem.  Middle   High   

Branford                               1            

Bridgeport                1    1                  3 

Danbury                                           1 

East                                   1            
Hartford                                            

Groton                                            1 

Hartford                               1          2 

Middletown                     1                    

New Haven                              3          2 

New London         1           5       1          1 

Norwalk                                           1 

Stamford                                          2 

TOTAL              1      1    7       7         13 



a Three additional SBHCs, which do not receive state funding, are located at elementary schools in Bridgeport, Hartford, and New Haven.

b ECC = early childhood center; PK-8 = pre-kindergarten through grade 8; Elem. = elementary

school; Middle = middle school; High = high school.

TABLE 12-4. The ten medical services provided most frequently by

DPHAS-funded school-based health centers in SFY 1994a (1).


                                       No.     
Rank  Service type                  service   
encounters  

  1    History taken                    14,094 

  2    Reproductive health              13,092 
       education                               

  3    General health education         11,816 

  4    Physical examination             11,062 



Table 12-4 continues.

TABLE 12-4. (Continued.)


                                       No.     
Rank  Service type                  service   
encounters  

  5    Medicine administered or          5,513 
       dispensed                               

  6    Health screenings                 4,774 

  7    Dental services                   3,725 

  8    Reproductive health               2,342 
       servicesb                               

  9    Prescription given                1,554 

  10   Tuberculosis testing              1,047 



a Data from Weaver High School (Hartford) not included.

b Includes pelvic exams, STD screens, Pap smears, and methods check.

TABLE 12-5. The ten psycho-social services provided most frequently

by DPHAS-funded school-based health centers in SFY 1994a (1).


                                        No.     
Rank  Service type                   service   
encounters  

  1    Psychological                     10,159 
       support/counseling                       

  2    Family problem counseling          6,730 

  3    Referral/advocacy                  6,079 

  4    Peer problem counseling            5,910 

  5    School problem counseling          4,814 

  6    Stress management                  2,762 
       counseling                               

  7    Substance abuse counseling         2,141 

  8    Depression counseling              1,427 

  9    Psycho-social evaluation           1,420 

  10   Violence counseling                1,353 



a Data from Weaver High School (Hartford) not included.

OF NOTE

During SFY 1994, a total of 8,935 students made 41,856 visits to school-based health centers, during which 140,414 services were provided. The services ranged from diagnosis and treatment of acute health problems to sports physicals and nutrition education.

Nearly 40% of the children and adolescents who registered for care had no regular source of medical care..

REFERENCE

(1) Provisional data for SFY 1994. Department records. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Community Health and State-operated Treatment Facilities, School and Adolescent Health, Hartford, CT.

12.3 Community Health Centers

Community health centers (CHCs) are non-profit organizations whose main purpose is to provide comprehensive primary care services to low-income, uninsured, and underinsured people of all ages. The primary care services include medical, mental health, dental, substance abuse, and social services, as well as community-based programs, outreach, and enabling services. Obstetrics and gynecology, family planning, diagnostic laboratory, health education, HIV, and homeless services also are offered at most sites.

CHCs promote access to health care through their strategic neighborhood location, multilingual staff, sliding fee scale, and continuity of care. They provide health care to all, regardless of insurance status.

CHCs are staffed by board-certified family practitioners, internists, pediatricians, and obstetricians/gynecologists, along with nurse practitioners, nurse midwives, physician assistants, nutritionists, social workers, and dentists.

TABLE 12-6. Numbers and locations of community health centers, including

satellite and categorical service sites, in Connecticut as of November 30, 1994a (1).


                                     Main     Additional  
City/town                 Main    satellite    service    
siteb                 sitesc    

Bridgeport                      2          2           13 

Danielson                                  1              

Hartford                        2                      18 

Meriden                         2                         

Middletown                      1                         

New Haven                       2          1           11 

New London                                 1              

Norwich                                    1              

Old Saybrook                               1              

Stamford                        1                         

Stratford                                  1              

Waterbury                       1                         

Windham                         1                         



TOTAL                          12          8           42 



a As part of the State-funded Community Center Expansion, two new satellites (West Haven

and Groton) and two new CHC corporations are being developed.

b There are presently 12 CHC corporations. One main site is listed for each CHC corporation.

c Additional categorical services are provided at eight senior health centers, seven substance

abuse sites, one substance abuse/homeless health services site, six school-based health centers,

one child guidance clinic, and one perinatal site.

TABLE 12-7. Numbers and percentages of persons served at community health centers during SFY 1994, by gender, race/ethnicity, and age (1).


Characteristic              Number       Percenta   

Gender                                              

Male                            51,203           43 

Female                          68,151           57 

Race/Ethnicityb                                     

White (non-Hispanic)            20,434           17 

Black (non-Hispanic)            37,575           31 

Hispanic                        57,911           49 

Other                            1,631            1 

Unknown                          1,803            2 

Age group (years)                                   

<1                               5,409            5 

1-4                             13,928           12 

5-14                            24,091           20 

15-19                           12,136           10 

20-34                           29,485           25 

35-44                           15,321           13 

45-64                           12,586           11 

65+                              6,264            5 

Unknown                            134              



TOTAL                          119,354          100 



a Subgroup percentage totals may not equal 100, due to rounding.

b All race/ethnicity categories are mutually exclusive.

TABLE 12-8. Numbers and types of visits to community health centers, for all clients and for self-paya clients during SFY 1994 (1).


                     Total visits        Self-pay visitsa    

% of total   
Visit type         Number    Percent    Number      visitsd    

Medical             256,656       64.8    62,849          65.3 

Dental               49,567       12.5    18,000          18.7 

Mental health        29,761        7.5     3,472           3.6 

Substance abuse      23,571        6.0     3,542           3.7 

Otherb               36,475        9.2     8,449           8.8 



TOTALc              396,030        100    96,312         100.1 



a Self-pay clients = uninsured clients.

b Other visits include social services, WIC, podiatry, hospital visits, and nutrition services.

c The total number of visits comprises 512,416 face-to-face encounters with billable providers.

d Percentage total does not equal 100, due to rounding.

TABLE 12-9. Payer mix for clients who visited community

health centers during SFY 1994 (1).


Payer                No. visits    Percent   

Medicaid                 184,969        46.7 

Medicare                  17,283         4.4 

City welfare              61,055        15.4 

Private insurance         23,276         5.9 

Self pay                  96,312        24.3 
(uninsured)                                  

Othera                    13,135         3.3 



TOTAL                    396,030         100 



a Includes WIC (see Section 7.3) and family planning.

OF NOTE

Connecticut's community health centers are part of a network of more than 700 CHCs nationwide (2).

Compared to the general population, people with incomes below 200% of the federal poverty level are "at risk" for elevated rates of mortality and morbidity, and face substantial barriers to health care access. An estimated 519,088 persons--about 16% of Connecticut's population--fall into this "at risk" group (3).

REFERENCES

(1) Connecticut Primary Care Association. 1994. Community health center medically uninsured contract, SFY 1994. Prepared for: State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Community Health and State-operated Treatment Facilities, Division of Program Management, Primary Care Cooperative Agreement, Hartford, CT.

(2) Community health center directory. 1994. US Public Health Service, Health Resources and Service Administration, Bureau of Primary Health Care, Bethesda, MD.

(3) Connecticut socio-economic characteristics.: 1990 census sample data. 1993. Prepared by NY, CT, and MA State Data Centers, using 1990 Census of Population and Housing Summary Tape File 3A. Distributed by State of Connecticut, Office of Policy and Management, Hartford, CT.

12.4 Sexual Assault Crisis Services

Connecticut Sexual Assault Crisis Services, Inc. (CONNSACS) is a statewide association of 12 community-based sexual assault crisis programs working together to end sexual violence through victim assistance, community education, and legislative action.

All CONNSACS member agencies provide free, confidential, direct services to past and present victims of sexual assault and sexual abuse and to their families. The services include a 24-hour hotline, crisis intervention and short-term counseling, accompaniment and advocacy through the medical, police, and court systems, information and referral for other needs, and support groups for rape and incest victims and survivors. Member agencies also provide professional in-service trainings, child sexual abuse prevention programs, and community education. Male counselors and bilingual staff are available.

TABLE 12-10. Characteristics of the primary victimsa of sexual assault served by CONNSACS during SFY 1994. Total primary victims = 4,569; total secondary victimsb = 2,259 (1).


Characteristics                                 
of primary victims    No. victims    Percent    

Gender                                          

Female                       4,113          90% 

Male                           456          10% 

Age (years)                                     

0-12                           578          13% 

13-17                          782          17% 

18-29                        1,558          34% 

30-44                        1,375          30% 

45-64                          263           6% 

65+                             13          <1% 

Race and Ethnicityc                             

White                        3,540          77% 

Black                          556          12% 

Hispanic                       354           8% 

American Indian                  4          <1% 

Other                           39          <1% 

Unknown                         76           2% 

Disability                                      

Disabled                       213           5% 

Unknown                      4,356          95% 



a Primary victims are those who have been sexually abused, assaulted, or harassed.

This abuse may have taken place recently or in the past, and the victim may be

male or female or any age.

b Secondary victims are those who know and/or interact with a primary victim

(i.e., partners, parents, employers, teachers, etc.)

c All racial and ethnic categories are mutually exclusive.

TABLE 12-11. Numbers and percentages of primary victims of

various crimes for persons served by CONNSACS and its members

during SFY 1994 (1).


Type of crime or       No. victims    Percent    
assailant                                        

Crime                                            

Rapea                         1,452          32% 

Gang rape                       134           3% 

Date rapeb                      N/A          N/A 

Spousal rape                    163           4% 

Cohabitation rape                95           2% 

Attempted rape                  118           3% 

Sexual contact                  113           2% 

Incest                        1,419          31% 

Child sexual abuse              890          19% 

Sexual harassment               185           4% 

Assailant                                        

Known to victim               4,055          89% 

Unknown to victim               514          11% 



a Includes all rapes, except by a spouse or cohabitor.

b Numbers of date rape victims were not distinguished from other rape victims for

SFY 1994; however, during SFY 1993, 11% (500) of CONNSACS clients were

victims of date rape.

OF NOTE

A rape crisis hotline is available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year in every town in Connecticut. Phone CONNSACS at (203) 282-9881 for local hotline numbers.

Since SFY 1989, the number of victims served by the 12 sexual assault crisis centers in Connecticut has increased by 84%.

Gang rapes reported to rape crisis centers in CT increased 41% between SFY 1993 and SFY 1994.

It is estimated that 85% of all rapes go unreported to the police (2).

In the US, forcible rape of adult women occurs at a rate of about 1 every 46 seconds, for a projected total of 683,000 per year (2).

REFERENCES

(1) Victim statistics for SFY 1994 (unpublished). Connecticut Sexual Assault Crisis Services, Inc., East Hartford, CT.

(2) Rape in America: A report to the nation. 1992. National Victim Center, Arlington, VA, and Crime Victim Research and Treatment Center, Charleston, SC. 16 pp.

12.5 Acute Care

The Connecticut General Statutes require Connecticut's acute care hospitals to report facility-specific financial data and information on patient volumes to the Commission on Hospitals and Health Care each year. The Commission uses the information to identify trends in hospital utilization, to assess the financial viability of the facilities, and to determine relative cost of the hospitals.

The Connecticut Health Information Management and Exchange (CHIME), a program of the Connecticut Hospital Research and Education Foundation, Inc., is a statewide data bank of discharge data from Connecticut acute care facilities. CHIME data are contributed by the member hospitals of the Connecticut Hospital Association.

TABLE 12-12. Selected data on patient volumes (1) and emergency department (ED) visits (2) for Connecticut's acute care hospitals during FFY 1993.


                      No.        No.    Avg. length    No.    
Hospital            patient   discharge   of stay       ED    
days         s        (days)     visits  

Wm. W. Backus          57,011    10,105          5.6   38,476 

Bradley Memorial       16,729     2,369          7.1   16,306 

Bridgeporta           148,837    19,917          7.5   60,476 

Bristol                47,990     8,544          5.6   24,546 

Danbury               112,120    19,049          5.9   57,830 

Day Kimball            26,131     5,216          5.0   18,465 

John Dempsey           58,275     6,670          8.7   15,887 

Greenwich              53,417     8,758          6.1   22,406 

Griffin                42,830     6,506          6.6   35,945 

Hartford              249,116    39,749          6.3   96,921 

Charlotte              43,649     6,705          6.5   23,692 
Hungerfordb                                                   

Johnson Memorial       22,025     3,305          6.7   12,636 

Lawrence &             78,334    13,323          5.9   73,801 
Memorial                                                      

Manchester             58,015    10,013          5.8   47,143 
Memorial                                                      

Middlesex              59,383    11,043          5.4   72,029 

Milford                28,719     5,029          5.7   23,405 

Mount Sinai            51,065     8,298          6.2   22,060 

New Britain            89,170    15,718          5.7   41,077 
General                                                       

Newington              13,031       876         14.9        0 
Children's                                                    

New Milford            18,612     3,574          5.2   16,444 

Norwalk               100,174    14,555          6.9   23,779 

Park Citya             10,878     1,883          5.8   10,627 

Rockville              22,806     4,811          4.7   15,494 
General                                                       

Saint Francis         147,057    23,338          6.3   46,779 

Saint Joseph           40,696     5,885          6.9   16,541 

Saint Mary's           86,364    14,342          6.0   56,198 

Saint Raphael         161,043    20,809          7.7   47,863 



Table 12-12 continues.

TABLE 12-12. (Continued.)


                      No.        No.        Avg.               
Hospital            Patient   Discharges  length of     ED     
days                   stay      visits   
(days)              

Saint Vincent's       120,986     17,342         7.0    43,556 

Sharon                 20,521      3,453         5.9    13,824 

Stamford               71,714     12,454         5.8    26,170 

Veterans               54,711     10,093         5.4    53,351 
Memorial                                                       

Waterbury              87,849     14,058         6.2    43,882 

Windhamc               24,790      4,634         5.3       N/A 

Winsted Memorial        7,173      1,210         5.9    13,567 

Yale-New Haven        236,031     35,579         6.6    69,081 

TOTAL               2,467,252    389,213         6.3 1,200,257 



a Park City Hospital merged with Bridgeport Hospital effective April 1, 1993. Emergency depart-

ment statistics are all inclusive in Bridgeport Hospital, and other statistics for Park City Hospital

are for the first 6 months of FFY 1993.

b Charlotte Hungerford Hospital did not report emergency department visits for September, 1993.

c Windham Hospital did not report emergency department visits.

TABLE 12-13. Selected financial data for Connecticut's acute care hospitals for

FFY 1993 (1). Hospitals are ranked by cost indexa (3).


                           Gross revenues       Operating       
($ x 1,000)                  Cost  
expenses        

Rank Hospital          Total                       ($ x   indexa 
I/Pb     O/Pb   1,000)          

    1 Newington          30,652   17,453   13,199   33,376   2.74 
      Children's                                                  

    2 Saint Joseph       89,800   73,541   16,259   49,974   1.22 

    3 Milford            66,197   47,386   18,811   36,707   1.18 

    4 New Milford        55,614   36,936   18,678   31,490   1.16 

    5 Griffin            98,387   65,085   33,302   56,377   1.15 

    6 Winsted            21,433   13,106    8,327   13,444   1.14 

    7 Sharon             41,923   29,508   12,415   25,976   1.13 

    8 Johnson            49,090   34,050   15,040   29,419   1.12 
      Memorial                                                    

    9 John Dempsey      138,161   93,875   44,286  103,961   1.12 

   10 Veteran's         148,528   90,113   58,415   93,380   1.10 
      Memorial                                                    

   11 Greenwich         129,820   81,867   47,953   85,703   1.07 

   12 Windham            68,792   41,994   26,798   39,158   1.06 

   13 Waterbury         199,108  150,538   48,570  122,807   1.04 

   14 Bridgeport        248,014  205,910   42,105  167,159   1.03 

   15 Rockville          60,089   31,457   28,632   42,121   1.03 
      General                                                     

   16 Saint Vincent's   216,641  183,095   33,546  122,403   1.03 

   17 Saint Raphael     337,109  277,854   59,255  222,045   1.02 



Table 12-13 continues.

TABLE 12-13. (Continued.)


                           Gross revenues       Operatin        
($ x 1,000)           g      Cost  
expenses        


Rank Hospital          Total                       ($ x   indexa 
I/Pb      O/Pb   1,000))         

   18 Day Kimball       62,150    37,210   24,940   42,302   1.01 

   19 Manchester       126,308    76,580   49,728   81,972   1.01 
      Memorial                                                    

   20 Norwalk          219,953   157,523   62,430  143,941   1.01 

   21 Yale-New Haven   585,774   487,651   98,123  375,890   1.01 

   22 Stamford         140,823   108,715   32,108   93,495   1.00 

   23 Lawrence &       160,444   108,471   51,973  104,130   1.00 
      Memorial                                                    

   24 Bristol           91,385    57,711   33,674   64,325   1.00 

   25 Hartford         494,787   409,704   85,083  343,094   1.00 

   26 Mount Sinai      131,550    85,217   46,333   79,143   0.96 

   27 Charlotte         78,622    53,291   25,332   55,240   0.95 
      Hungerford                                                  

   28 Danbury          240,055   166,819   73,236  161,679   0.95 

   29 Bradley           36,029    22,500   13,529   24,269   0.94 
      Memorial                                                    

   30 Middlesex        140,557    84,547   56,010   99,020   0.90 

   31 Wm. W. Backus    106,725    68,098   38,626   73,293   0.89 

   32 Saint Mary's     205,832   140,785   65,047  119,772   0.88 

   33 Saint Francis    303,127   225,467   77,660  206,439   0.86 

   34 New Britain      168,054   108,710   59,344  122,357   0.84 
      General                                                     

 N/A  Park Cityc        28,798    18,610   10,187   18,322    N/A 

      TOTAL            5,320,3 3,891,377 1,428,95 3,484,18        
                            31                  4        3        



a Cost index is a measure of the relative cost of inpatient hospital services to payers. It compares an estimate of a hospital's inpatient net revenue per discharge or "cost," adjusted for case mix and other factors that are not comparable among hospitals (medical education expenses, proportion of indigent patients, etc.), with an estimate of a statewide average or "standard" inpatient net revenue per discharge. An index greater than 1.0 means that the hospital's comparable cost for inpatient services is higher than the statewide weighted average, and an index less than 1.0 means the hospital's comparable cost to payers is lower than average.

b I/P = inpatient; O/P = outpatient.

c Park City Hospital merged with Bridgeport Hospital effective April 1, 1993, so cost index for

FFY 1995 budget was not calculated.

TABLE 12-14. The top 25 diagnosis related groupsa assigned to patients discharged from 31 Connecticut acute care hospitalsb during FFY 1994c (4).


                                                      No.     
Rank Diagnosis related group (DRG)a                discharges 


   1 391  Normal newborn                               33,936 

   2 373  Vaginal delivery w/o complicating            30,580 
     diagnoses                                                

   3 430  Psychoses                                     9,129 

   4 127  Heart failure or shock                        8,508 

   5 371  Cesarean section w/o cc                       6,774 



Table 12-14 continues.

TABLE 12-14. (Continued.)


                                                       No.    
Rank Diagnosis related group (DRG)a                 discharge 
s     

   6 089  Simple pneumonia & pleurisy age >17 w/        6,670 
     cc                                                       

   7 209  Major joint & limb reattachment               5,325 
     procedures (lower extremities)                           

   8 112  Percutaneous cardiovascular procedures        5,265 

   9 143  Chest pain                                    5,255 

  10 140  Angina pectoris                               5,007 

  11 014  Specific cerebrovascular disorders            4,902 
     except TIAd                                              

  12 215  Back and neck procedures w/o cce              4,548 

  13 359  Uterine & adnexa procedures for               4,481 
     non-malignancy w/o cce                                   

  14 390  Neonate w/ other significant problems         4,382 

  15 088  Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease         4,269 

  16 174  Gastrointentestinal hemorrhage w/ cce         3,659 

  17 182  Esophagitis, gastroent. & misc.               3,558 
     digestive disorders age >17 w/ cce                       

  18 410  Chemotherapy w/o acute leukemia as            3,539 
     secondary diagnosis                                      

  19 124  Circulatory disorders ex. AMIf w/             3,476 
     cardiac catheter & complex diag.                         

  20 494  Laparoscopic cholecystectomy w/o CDEg         3,302 
     w/o cce                                                  

  21 372  Vaginal delivery w/ complicating              3,064 
     diagnosis                                                

  22 148  Major small & large bowel procedures w/       3,063 
     cce                                                      

  23 138  Cardiac arrhythmia & conduction               3,054 
     disorders w/ cce                                         

  24 389  Full-term neonate w/ major problems           2,945 

  25 121  Circulatory disorders w/ AMIf & CVCh          2,917 
     discharged alive                                         

Total discharges assigned to top 25 DRGs             171,608 

Total discharges during FFY 1994b                    369,803 



a Cases are classified into DRGs based on the principal diagnosis, up to eight additional diagnoses, up to six procedures performed during the stay, and the age, sex, and discharge status of the patient. The DRG is therefore not necessarily synonymous with "cause of hospitalization."

b Does not include data for Charlotte Hungerford, Griffin, or Windham hospitals.

c The Connecticut Hospital Research and Education Foundation, Inc. disclaims any responsibility for conclusions drawn from analysis of the data.

d TIA = transient ischemic attach (stroke).

e cc = complications and comorbidities.

f AMI = acute myocardial infarction.

g CDE = common duct exploration.

h CVC = cardiovascular complications.

REFERENCES

(1) Summary hospital data from Schedule S10 for October 1, 1992 through

September 30, 1993. State of Connecticut, Commission on Hospitals and Health Care, Hartford, CT.

(2) Emergency department visits, 36 short-term Connecticut hospitals, 1993 vs. 1992. Patient Census Report 93(12): 21. Connecticut Hospital Association, Wallingford, CT.

(3) Hospital cost index for FY 1995 budget. 1994. State of Connecticut, Commission on Hospitals and Health Care, Hartford, CT.

(4) CHIME database. 1994. Connecticut Hospital Research and Education Foundation, Inc., Connecticut Health Information Management and Exchange (CHIME), Wallingford, CT.

12.6 Home Health Care

Home health care agencies are licensed and are required to submit annual service reports to the Hospital and Medical Care Division of DPHAS, which compiles and summarizes the data for presentation at 5-year intervals. The agencies provide a variety of services, including skilled nursing, physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy, social work services, and homemaker-home health aide services. (See Section 11.1 for numbers of licensed home health care agencies.)

TABLE 12-15. Characteristics of home health care agencies and

types of services they delivered during SFY 1993 (1).


Agency or service                  Number     
characteristic                                

Staff serving clients                  16,803 

Clients served                         75,342 

Service visits:                               

Homemaker-home health aide          2,433,665 

Nursing                             1,257,238 

Physical therapy                      255,194 

Occupational therapy                   31,807 

Social work                            40,351 

Speech therapy                         16,917 

Total visits, all services          4,035,172 



TABLE 12-16. Sex, age, primary diagnosis, functional status, living

arrangement, referral source, and primary payer of recipients of home

health care services in Connecticut during SFY 1993 (1).


Client characteristic          Numbera    Percent  

Sex                                                

Male                              27,413       36% 

Female                            47,929       64% 

Age                                                

<65                               22,343       30% 

65-74                             16,687       22% 

75-84                             23,243       31% 

85+                               13,069       17% 

Primary diagnosis                                  

Heart disease                     10,040       13% 

Cancer                             9,262       12% 

Other                             56,064       75% 

Functional status                                  

Ambulatory, needs no              27,353       37% 
assistance                                         

Ambulatory, needs                 39,366       53% 
assistanceb                                        

Non-ambulatoryc                    7,891       10% 



Table 12-16 continues.

TABLE 12-16. (Continued.)


Client characteristic                 Numbera     Percent  

Living arrangement                                         

Living alone                              24,016       32% 

Living with persons who assist            45,090       59% 
with care                                                  

Living with persons who do not             7,078        9% 
assist with care                                           

Referral source                                            

General hospital                          39,426       53% 

Private physician                         11,264       15% 

Self or family                             6,659        9% 

Other                                     17,385       23% 

Primary payerd                                             

Medicare                               2,457,528       59% 

Medicaid                                 843,738       20% 

BC/BS & commercial insurance             349,891        8% 

State or local government                234,957        7% 

Self pay (uninsured)                     184,824        4% 

Other                                    100,894        2% 



a Totals for each client characteristic do not always equal total clients from preceding table, because of unknown or missing data.

b Requires assistance with personal care, use of walkers, etc.

c Requires assistance with personal care, use of equipment, and confined to bed for most of the day.

d Data refer to number and percent of visits paid for by the various sources, not number and percent of clients.

OF NOTE

Connecticut was one of the first states to establish a uniform system for collecting and reporting home health care service data (established in 1986).

The home health care industry has experienced major growth in delivery of all services. Between 1991 and 1993 the following increases were reported:

17% more clients;

43% more home visits;

39% more children served in the 0-5 year age group;

18% more clients served in the 85+ year age group.

The proportion of for-profit home health care agencies in Connecticut has been increasing steadily and in SFY 1993 represented 36% of the market.

REFERENCE

(1) Home health care agency annual licensure renewal applications for SFY 1993. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Bureau of Health System Regulation, Hospital and Medical Care Division, Hartford, CT.

12.7 Long-term Care

The Connecticut Public Health Code requires nursing home administrators to submit an annual patient roster and census report to DPHAS. The roster, a chronological list of patients who resided in a facility between October 1 and September 30 of a given reporting year, contains demographic and health status information about each patient. In the DPHAS Health Research and Data Analysis Unit, records for individual patients are merged into a longitudinal database, which contains all nursing home patient records filed since 1977. The staff also provide technical and analytic support to the Connecticut Partnership for Long-Term Care, an arrangement between the State and private insurers for long-term-care insurance.

TABLE 12-17. Age and primary payer, by sex, of patients who resided in Connecticut nursing homes on September 30, 1993a,b (1).


                       Male         Female         Total     

Characteristic        No.       %     No.      %     No.      % 

Age group (years)                                               

<55                   511       2     449      1     960      3 

55-64                 516       2     579      2   1,095      4 

65-74               1,344       4   2,215      8   3,559     12 

75-84               2,666       9   6,963     24   9,629     33 

85+                 2,334       8  11,504     40  13,838     48 

Totalc              7,371      25  21,714     75  29,085    100 

Payer                                                           

Medicaid            4,687      16  14,694     51  19,381     67 

Private             1,497       5   4,961     17   6,458     22 

Medicare              748       2   1,620      6   2,368      8 

Out-of-state          258       1     309      1     567      2 
Medicaid                                                        

Other                 179     0.5     124    0.5     303      1 

Totald              7,369      25  21,708     75  29,077    100 



a The data in this table represent a census of nursing home residents on September 30, 1993, regardless of admission dates. The census did not include patients who were discharged and not

re-admitted by September 30.

b As of September 30, 1993, the licensed bed capacity was 30,901, which included 1,072 new beds added during FFY 1993, and the occupancy rate was 94.1%.

c Totals include four females for whom age was not recorded.

d Totals do not include eight patients for whom payer was not recorded.

OF NOTE

Long-term nursing home residents are more likely to be unmarried, low-income, female, and on Medicaid. More than 2.24 million Americans used a nursing home or licensed personal care home in 1987, the most recent year for which national data are available (2).

REFERENCES

(1) Annual patient roster, October 1, 1992-September 30, 1993. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Office of Strategic Planning and Information Services, Health Research and Data Analysis Unit. Hartford, CT.

(2) Feinleib, S.E., P.J. Cunningham, and P.F. Short. 1994. Use of nursing and personal care homes by the civilian population, 1987. 1994. National Medical Expenditure Survey Research Findings 23. Bethesda, MD, US Public Health Service, Agency for Health Care Policy and Research, Publ. No. 94-0096.
 


APPENDICES

Most Popular Names for Babies

Federal Poverty Guidelines
 


A-1 Most Popular Names for Babies

The following lists of most frequently used names for babies born to Connecticut residents were tabulated using the exact spelling of the name on the birth certificate. Variations in the spelling of the same name (Ashley, Ashlie, etc.) were not grouped together for ranking.

TABLE A-1. The most popular names for female babies born to Connecticut

residents in CY 1993 and ten years earlier (1). Number of infants given each

name is also shown.


              1993                 1983         

Rank  Name           No.      Name          No.   

     1 Emily            431    Jennifer        695 

     2 Sarah            403    Jessica         615 

     3 Ashley           388    Sarah           413 

     4 Jessica          375    Nicole          365 

     5 Nicole           371    Melissa         360 

     6 Samantha         343    Elizabeth       302 

     6 Amanda           323    Stephanie       299 

     8 Stephanie        283    Ashley          293 

     9 Lauren           262    Katherine       190 

    10 Elizabeth        254    Megan           175 



TABLE A-2. The most popular names for male babies born to Connecticut

residents in CY 1993 and ten years earlier (1). Number of infants given each

name is also shown.


              1993                 1983         

Rank  Name           No.      Name          No.   

     1 Michael          918    Michael       1,107 

     2 Matthew          675    Christopher     876 

     3 Christopher      623    Matthew         739 

     4 Nicholas         553    David           599 

     5 Ryan             490    Daniel          563 

     6 John             433    John            485 

     6 Joseph           433    Jason           451 

     8 Daniel           424    Joseph          444 

     9 Andrew           421    Brian           433 

    10 Joshua           390    James           420 



TABLE A-3. The most popular names for female white, black, and Hispanic

babies born to Connecticut residents during CY 1993 (1).


                Race or ethnicity           

Rank  White        Black       Hispanic      

     1 Emily        Jasmine     Stephanie     

     2 Sarah        Ashley      Ashley        

     3 Nicole       Amber       Kassandra     

     4 Jessica      Taylor      Jessica       

     5 Samantha     Brianna     Jennifer      

     6 Ashley       Brittany    Amanda        

     7 Amanda       Briana      Jasmine       

     8 Stephanie    Alexis      Vanessa       

     9 Lauren       Bria        Maria         

    10 Elizabeth    Chelsea     Melissa       



TABLE A-4. The most popular names for male white, black, and Hispanic

babies born to Connecticut residents during CY 1993 (1).


                Race or ethnicity           

Rank  White        Black       Hispanic      

     1 Michael      Christopher Jonathan      

     2 Matthew      Brandon     Joshua        

     3 Nicholas     Michael     Jose          

     4 Christopher  Anthony     Luis          

     5 Ryan         Jordan      Angel         

     6 Joseph       James       Christopher   

     7 John         Joshua      Michael       

     8 Daniel       Robert      Juan          

     9 Andrew       Aaron       Anthony       

    10 Joshua       Eric        Carlos        



OF NOTE

Some of the more unusual names used in 1993 were Courage, Cupid, Jazz, Lefty, Miracle, Storm, Victorious, and Zen (boys), and Blue, Care, Caress, Chastity, Cherish, Genesis, Justice, Medlyne, Miracle, Odyssey, Patience, Precious, Pretty, Rhapsody, September, Symphoni, Sahara, Summer, and Trinity (girls).

REFERENCE

(1) Analysis of 1983 and 1993 master files of birth records (unpublished). 1994. State of Connecticut, Department of Public Health and Addiction Services, Office of Strategic Planning and Information Services, Health Research and Data Analysis, Hartford, CT.

A-2 Federal Poverty Guidelines

Each year the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) publishes poverty guidelines, with each annual adjustment effective July 1. These guidelines are a simplified version of the federal government's statistical poverty thresholds used by the Bureau of the Census to prepare its estimates of the number of persons and families living in poverty. The HHS poverty guidelines are used for administrative purposes, such as for determining whether a person or family is financially eligible for assistance or services under a particular state or federal program. In certain cases, the program uses the poverty guidelines as one of several eligibility criteria, or uses a percentage multiple of the guidelines.

TABLE A-5. 1994 HHS poverty guidelines, expressed as annual or annualized income, for all states (except Alaska and Hawaii) and the District of Columbiaa (1). Amounts for percentage multiples of the guidelines are rounded upward to the nearest dollar.b


Family  Guidelin     Percentage multiples of federal     
e               poverty guidelines            

size    amount     110%     133%     175%     185%     200% 

   1      $7,360  $8,096   $9,789  $12,880  $13,616  $14,720 

   2       9,840  10,824   13,087   17,220   18,204   19,680 

   3      12,320  13,552   16,386   21,560   22,792   24,640 

   4      14,800  16,280   19,684   25,900   27,380   29,600 

   5      17,280  19,008   22,982   30,240   31,968   34,560 

   6      19,760  21,736   26,281   34,580   36,556   39,520 

   7      22,240  24,464   29,579   38,920   41,144   44,480 

   8      24,720  27,192   32,878   43,260   45,732   49,440 

 Each                                                        
 add'l     2,480   2,728    3,298    4,340    4,588    4,960 
person                                                       



a The 1993 guideline amount for a family of one was $6,970, with $2,460 for each additional

person. The 1994 amounts reflect the 1993 change in the Consumer Price Index.

b The amounts of the percentage multiples were calculated by DPHAS staff and were not provided

by the US Department of Health and Human Services.

REFERENCE

(1) Annual update of the HHS poverty guidelines. 1994. Federal Register 59(28): 6277-6278.

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