JAMA : the journal of the American Medical Association
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The death certificates and coroners' reports for all suicides, undetermined causes of death, and questionable accidents were obtained from the Pennsylvania Department of Vital Statistics for 10- to 19-year-old residents of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, from 1960 to 1983. During the 24-year study period, 159 cases of definite suicide and 38 cases of likely suicide were noted. The suicide rate increased markedly among youth during the study period, particularly among white males aged 15 to 19 years, and was not due to changes in classification procedures over time. ⋯ The proportion of suicide victims who had detectable blood alcohol levels rose 3.6-fold from 12.9% in 1968 to 1972 to 46.0% in 1978 to 1983. Suicide victims who used firearms were 4.9 times more likely to have been drinking than were those who used other methods of suicide. The availability of firearms and the increased use of alcohol among youth may have made a significant contribution to the increase in the suicide rate among the young.
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Public health laws intended to prevent children from smoking have been enacted in many states. We surveyed the relevant laws in all states and the District of Columbia. ⋯ On the basis of this experience and a review of existing laws, we have made recommendations for a model law. These include a prohibition of the possession of tobacco by minors, a prohibition of the sale of tobacco to minors, a requirement for a warning sign at the point of sale, a ban on cigarette vending machines, and a reward for individuals reporting violators of vending laws.
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To elucidate the factors that might influence compliance with oral contraceptive use among sexually active adolescents, we undertook a study of 209 unmarried adolescents initiating use of oral contraceptives in three different settings: an inner-city adolescent clinic, a birth control clinic in a midsized industrial city, and a suburban private practice. At the three-month follow-up visit, factors associated with compliance included older age, suburban residence, white race, health care in the suburban private practice, payment status, prior use of contraception, mother's unawareness of oral contraceptives, married parents, older boyfriend, lack of worry about being pregnant, and satisfaction with pill use. ⋯ Ten pregnancies occurred during the study period among noncompliant site I patients. Inner-city clinic patients were at high risk of noncompliance and unplanned pregnancy.