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Kids' Health Data Highlight: Parental Attendance at Kids' Activities in 2016 (Infographic)

August 16, 2018:

It is increasingly clear that health is determined not just by biological and clinical factors but to a greater extent by socio-demographic factors. With this in mind, we need data for monitoring the social determinants of health just as we do for monitoring biological and clinical determinants. The U.S. Census Bureau recently released estimates from the 2016 National Survey of Children’s Health (NSCH), providing a data source that is ideal for precisely this purpose. The NSCH provides traditional measures of health status and access to care among children along with rich data on the social factors that determine health including family, neighborhood, school, and social context.

SHADAC is highlighting state-specific findings from the 2016 NCSH on measures that illustrate where states are closer to achieving a culture of health and where improvements can be made. As additional years of NCSH data are released, we will be able to monitor trends in these indicators to track progress in developing a culture of health over time.

Parental Attendance at Kids’ Activities

According to 2016 data from the NSCH, 82.3% of children nationwide (approximately 39,839,000 children) had parents regularly attending their activities in 2016. This measure includes children with parents who reported that they always/usually attended events and activities in which their children participated.

Among the states, the highest percentages of children with parents regularly attending their activities in 2016 were found in Maine (91.9%), Vermont (91.6%), North Dakota (91.1%), South Dakota (90.8%), and Iowa (90.3%). The lowest percentages were found in Nevada (73.0%), the District of Columbia (75.4%), Arizona (77.4%), California (77.8%), and New York (77.9%).

In all, 16 states were statistically above the national average of 82.3% of children having parents regularly attending their activities in 2016, and two were below the national average.[1]

Click on the infographic for additional state-level information about children living in neighborhoods with no amenities.

Additional Kids’ Health Data Highlights

Kids' Health in the U.S.: Difficulties Making or Keeping Friends in 2016

Kids' Health in the U.S.: Living in Neighborhoods with No Amenities in 2016

Kids’ Health in the U.S.: Living in Supportive Neighborhoods in 2016

Kids’ Health in the U.S.: Living in Working Poor Households in 2016

Kids’ Health in the U.S.: Trouble Affording Nutritious Meals in 2016

More about the NSCH

The NSCH was administered three times prior to 2016 – in 2003, 2007, and 2011/12. However, the 2016 NSCH is different because it integrated the NSCH with the National Survey of Children with Special Health Care Needs (NS-CSHCN) and introduced a number of new survey items, establishing a new baseline. Going forward, the NSCH will be administered annually. The survey is administered online and via mail, and survey results are weighted to represent the population of non-institutionalized children ages 0-17 who live in housing units nationally and in each state.

The full 2016 NSCH public-use file (PUF) is available on the Census Bureau’s NSCH page.

 

[1] Statistically significant differences are calculated at the 95% level and account for the dependent relationship between state and national estimates.

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Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
University of Minnesota
The State Health Access Data Assistance Center (SHADAC) is a program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and a part of the Health Policy and Management Division of the School of Public Health at the University of Minnesota.
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