73°F
weather icon Clear

Clark County selected for CDC’s national health survey

Clark County is one of 15 counties nationwide selected to participate in an annual federal survey on health and nutrition beginning this month, the Southern Nevada Health District announced Tuesday.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) will visit about 560 randomly selected households in the county beginning Feb. 22 to gather health information from those who agree to provide it. Data gathered will be used in the design of health policies and programs.

The CDC doesn’t take volunteers — participants are selected by invitation only — but those who take part are paid up to $125 and receive free physical exams and health and nutrition evaluation reports.

“The comprehensive data collected by NHANES has a far-reaching and significant impact on everything from the quality of the air we breathe, to the vaccinations you get from your doctor, to the emergence of low-fat and “light” foods on the shelves of your grocery store,” said a health district news release announcing the survey. It also provides updated data on obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular disease.

Interviewees will be notified by mail if they were chosen to participate. Those who provide their consent will be visited by a health team in the following weeks that will conduct a 45-minute to one-hour interview, a spokesman for the survey said. Among other things, participants will be asked about their health habits and undergo a physical exam, the release said.

The nation’s “health check-up,” as National Center for Health Statistics Director Charles J. Rothwell calls it, has collected data for 55 years and done so annually for the last 19.

Contact Jessie Bekker at jbekker@reviewjournal.com or 702-380-4563. Follow @jessiebekks on Twitter.

Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
Want to ease anxiety? Look to the sky

Birding gives Southern Nevadans plenty of opportunity to practice mindfulness, an ideal state in which people focus on the present to find a little calm.

Knowledge can help you overcome bee stings, attack

If someone is stung by a bee, becomes dizzy, nauseated or has difficulty breathing, an allergic reaction to the sting may be occurring. This is a serious medical emergency and 9-1-1 should be called.

How to enroll in Medicare after being laid off

Dear Toni: My husband, Steven, has been laid off. He is 68 but never enrolled in Medicare Part B because he had employer benefits.