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CDPH recommends families add vaccines to back-to-school checklists

During National Immunization Awareness Month in August, the California Department of Public Health, or CDPH, is highlighting the importance of routine vaccines as students return to school. 

Vaccination prevents the spread of serious illnesses, reduces hospitalizations, saves lives, and helps keep kids in school and doing the activities they love.

While California’s immunization rates for kindergarten students remain higher than the national average, CDPH wants to keep rates high and continue to protect California children and communities from vaccine-preventable diseases. 

CDPH recommends families stay up to date on all vaccinations for the new school year.

“When our youngest Californians are healthy and able to participate in learning and doing the things they love, the future of California is brighter,” said Dr. Erica Pan, CDPH director and state Public Health officer. “As a parent and a pediatrician, I am grateful for and confident in the safety and effectiveness of vaccines, which have transformed the leading causes of childhood deaths away from infectious diseases. CDPH remains committed to ensuring all California families have access to safe and effective vaccines, and the information they need to understand that vaccine recommendations are based on credible, transparent, and science-based evidence."

Due to large outbreaks in other states, the number of measles cases in the U.S. as of July 2025 are already higher than any year since 2000, when the World Health Organization declared the disease eliminated in the United States due to vaccination. 

Over 90% of this year’s cases were not vaccinated, and more than 1 in 10 of those infected with measles were hospitalized, some in intensive care units. 

Three people have died this year from this entirely preventable disease, reminding us of the importance of immunization.

California continues to report more than 95% coverage among kindergarteners for the measles, mumps, and rubella, or MMR, vaccine.

While the state has maintained the level of vaccination necessary to prevent community spread for nearly a decade, it remains critical that our children and communities stay protected through continued vaccination.

Required Immunizations: California law requires students to receive age-specific immunizations to attend public and private schools and licensed childcare centers. Schools and licensed childcare centers are required to enforce immunization requirements, maintain immunization records of all children enrolled, and report children’s immunization status to CDPH.

Families can visit CDPH’s “Shots for School” and “Don’t Wait – Vaccinate!” webpages for information on immunization laws and required vaccinations for students in California.

Resources for Families: CDPH encourages families to seek reliable information to learn more about vaccines, including visiting the CDPH Vaccine Facts webpage. 

Families can also speak to their health care providers or contact their local health provider for help in finding a place to get immunized. Most health plans cover recommended vaccinations with no out-of-pocket costs. 

Children without insurance coverage qualify for the Vaccines for Children Program, which provides no-cost vaccines for eligible children.

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Written by: LAKE COUNTY NEWS REPORTS
Published: 23 July 2025

Padilla, Schiff, Booker announce bill to make access to equitable health care a protected civil right

U.S. Senators Alex Padilla (D-Calif.), Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) and Cory Booker (D-N.J.) have announced the Equal Health Care for All Act, bicameral legislation that would make equal access to medical care a protected civil right to help address the racial inequities and structural failures in America’s health care system that have led to higher mortality rates in communities of color. 

As President Trump and Republicans gut critical health care funding, the Equal Health Care for All Act would establish a definition for inequitable health care to help ensure that hospitals provide the same high quality health care services to all patients, regardless of race, national origin, sexual orientation, gender identity, disability, age or religion.

Republicans voted to gut Medicaid by over $900 billion, stripping health care from 17 million Americans, including over 2.3 million Californians. 

They cut more than $4 billion in funding for California hospitals, which will lead to hospital closures and higher health care costs, all to pay for tax cuts for the ultra-wealthy.

“By gutting billions of dollars for hospitals and other essential Medicaid services, the Trump Administration is hurting our patients and their pocketbooks in communities across the country,” said Sen. Padilla. “Our bill would treat equitable health care as a civil right to provide every patient with the access to the high-quality care they deserve.”

“Everyone deserves equal access to comprehensive, high-quality health care, free from discrimination,” said Sen. Booker. “However, this is not the reality for most communities across our country, with communities of color, especially women of color, bearing the disproportionate burden of poor health outcomes due to a lack of access to quality medical care. The Equal Health Care for All Act is legislation to combat the stark inequalities that exist in our health care system, and ensure every American has access to affordable, equitable care.”

“As the Trump administration rolls back access to funding for health care, it is imperative to protect the right to these essential services for all communities. I’m proud to co-lead the Equal Health Care Act for All to continue supporting high quality health care for all, because equal access is a fundamental right, and one that every American should enjoy,” said Sen. Schiff.

The Equal Health Care for All Act aims to remedy structural and systemic failures in America’s health care system that have led to Black, Hispanic, and indigenous individuals disproportionately suffering from a range of illnesses, from asthma to heart disease.

Black women are more likely than white women to die from breast cancer and during childbirth. Hispanic individuals suffer from higher rates of chronic diseases, including an 80 percent higher rate of diabetes.

Specifically, the Equal Health Care for All Act would:

• Require the Health and Human Services secretary to promote regulations requiring health care providers and facilities to disaggregate data on health outcomes by demographic characteristics;
• Require inclusion of quality measures of equitable health care in hospital value-based purchasing programs;
• Empower Medicare and Medicaid providers to enforce equitable health care standards;
• Rename the HHS “Office on Civil Rights” to “Office of Civil Rights and Health Equity;”
• Prohibit health care providers from providing inequitable health care to patients;
• Establish a Federal Health Equity Commission; and
• Authorize grants for hospitals to promote equitable health care outcomes.
 
The bill is also cosponsored by U.S. Sen. Ruben Gallego (D-Ariz.) and is supported by NAACP, National Urban League, American Diabetes Association and American Cancer Society.

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 23 July 2025

Dogs are helping people regulate stress even more than expected, research shows

Studies show that dogs help humans cope with stress. marcoventuriniautieri/E+ via Getty Immages

In a 2022 survey of 3,000 U.S. adults, more than one-third of respondents reported that on most days, they feel “completely overwhelmed” by stress. At the same time, a growing body of research is documenting the negative health consequences of higher stress levels, which include increased rates of cancer, heart disease, autoimmune conditions and even dementia.

Assuming people’s daily lives are unlikely to get less stressful anytime soon, simple and effective ways to mitigate these effects are needed.

This is where dogs can help.

As researchers at the University of Denver’s Institute for Human-Animal Connection, we study the effects animal companions have on their humans.

Dozens of studies over the last 40 years have confirmed that pet dogs help humans feel more relaxed. This would explain the growing phenomenon of people relying on emotional support dogs to assist them in navigating everyday life. Dog owners have also been shown to have a 24% lower risk of death and a four times greater chance of surviving for at least a year after a heart attack.

Now, a new study that we conducted with a team of colleagues suggests that dogs might have a deeper and more biologically complex effect on humans than scientists previously believed. And this complexity may have profound implications for human health.

How stress works

The human response to stress is a finely tuned and coordinated set of various physiological pathways. Previous studies of the effects of dogs on human stress focused on just one pathway at a time. For our study, we zoomed out a bit and measured multiple biological indicators of the body’s state, or biomarkers, from both of the body’s major stress pathways. This allowed us to get a more complete picture of how a dog’s presence affects stress in the human body.

The stress pathways we measured are the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal, or HPA, axis and the sympathoadrenal medullary, or SAM, axis.

When a person experiences a stressful event, the SAM axis acts quickly, triggering a “fight or flight” response that includes a surge of adrenaline, leading to a burst of energy that helps us meet threats. This response can be measured through an enzyme called alpha-amylase.

At the same time, but a little more slowly, the HPA axis activates the adrenal glands to produce the hormone cortisol. This can help a person meet threats that might last for hours or even days. If everything goes well, when the danger ends, both axes settle down, and the body goes back to its calm state.

While stress can be an uncomfortable feeling, it has been important to human survival. Our hunter-gatherer ancestors had to respond effectively to acute stress events like an animal attack. In such instances, over-responding could be as ineffective as under-responding. Staying in an optimal stress response zone maximized humans’ chances of survival.

An man pets a dog in a gym.
Dogs can be more helpful than human friends in coping with stressful situations. FG Trade/E+ via Getty Images

More to the story

After cortisol is released by the adrenal glands, it eventually makes its way into your saliva, making it an easily accessible biomarker to track responses. Because of this, most research on dogs and stress has focused on salivary cortisol alone.

For example, several studies have found that people exposed to a stressful situation have a lower cortisol response if they’re with a dog than if they’re alone – even lower than if they’re with a friend.

While these studies have shown that having a dog nearby can lower cortisol levels during a stressful event, suggesting the person is calmer, we suspected that was just part of the story.

What our study measured

For our study, we recruited about 40 dog owners to participate in a 15-minute gold standard laboratory stress test. This involves public speaking and oral math in front of a panel of expressionless people posing as behavioral specialists.

The participants were randomly assigned to bring their dogs to the lab with them or to leave their dogs at home. We measured cortisol in blood samples taken before, immediately after and about 45 minutes following the test as a biomarker of HPA axis activity. And unlike previous studies, we also measured the enzyme alpha-amylase in the same blood samples as a biomarker of the SAM axis.

As expected based on previous studies, the people who had their dog with them showed lower cortisol spikes. But we also found that people with their dog experienced a clear spike of alpha-amylase, while those without their dog showed almost no response.

No response may sound like a good thing, but in fact, a flat alpha-amylase response can be a sign of a dysregulated response to stress, often seen in people experiencing high stress responses, chronic stress or even PTSD. This lack of response is caused by chronic or overwhelming stress that can change how our nervous system responds to stressors.

In contrast, the participants with their dogs had a more balanced response: Their cortisol didn’t spike too high, but their alpha-amylase still activated. This shows that they were alert and engaged throughout the test, then able to return to normal within 45 minutes. That’s the sweet spot for handling stress effectively. Our research suggests that our canine companions keep us in a healthy zone of stress response.

Having a dog benefits humans’ physical and psychological health.

Dogs and human health

This more nuanced understanding of the biological effects of dogs on the human stress response opens up exciting possibilities. Based on the results of our study, our team has begun a new study using thousands of biomarkers to delve deeper into the biology of how psychiatric service dogs reduce PTSD in military veterans.

But one thing is already clear: Dogs aren’t just good company. They might just be one of the most accessible and effective tools for staying healthy in a stressful world.The Conversation

Kevin Morris, Research Professor of Social Work, University of Denver and Jaci Gandenberger, Research Associate of Social Work, University of Denver

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Details
Written by: Kevin Morris, University of Denver and Jaci Gandenberger, University of Denver
Published: 23 July 2025

Middletown man identified as fatality in Sunday crash; driver arrested

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — The California Highway Patrol said Tuesday that a south county wreck on Sunday evening claimed the life of a Middletown man, with the driver arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence and vehicular manslaughter.

The CHP’s Clear Lake Area office identified Samrat Kakkari, 45, as the person who died in the solo-vehicle crash.

The driver, Steven Craig Wilhite Jr., 44, of Calistoga, was arrested after the crash, authorities said.

The Tuesday report said that at approximately 6:58 p.m. Sunday, CHP Clear Lake personnel received a call of a traffic crash involving a solo vehicle rollover on Big Canyon Road, north of Harbin Springs Road, near Middletown.

When the officers arrived, they determined that the vehicle, a pickup, overturned several times, ejecting a passenger and causing fatal injuries, the CHP said.

Radio reports on Sunday night indicated that Kakkari was trapped under the bed of the pickup, which was on its side, blocking Big Canyon Road, as Lake County News has reported.

The Lake County Sheriff’s Office and South Lake County Fire also responded to the scene to assist with medical aid, the CHP said.

The CHP said the preliminary investigation determined that Wilhite was driving his Dodge Ram pickup while under the influence of a controlled substance while Kakkari was riding in the front right passenger seat of Wilhite’s truck.

Wilhite, the report said, “was driving at unsafe speeds on a dirt/gravel roadway causing him to lose control of his vehicle, which overturned and ejected Kakkari.”

The CHP said South Lake County firefighters worked to save his life but Kakkari died of his injuries at the scene.

Neither Wilhite nor Kakkari were wearing their seatbelts at the time of the crash, the CHP said.

Wilhite was arrested and treated for his injuries before being booked at the Lake County Jail for vehicular manslaughter while intoxicated and felony DUI, the CHP reported.

Lake County Jail records showed that Wilhite remained in custody on Tuesday afternoon, with bail set at $1,030,000.

Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, and on Bluesky, @erlarson.bsky.social. Find Lake County News on the following platforms: Facebook, @LakeCoNews; X, @LakeCoNews; Threads, @lakeconews, and on Bluesky, @lakeconews.bsky.social. 

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 22 July 2025

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