AMERICA»S SCHOOLCHILDREN TREATED LIKE LAB RATS, by John W. Whitehead «In almost every state across the nation, schoolchildren are being subjected to behavioral exams and mental health tests, often without their parents» knowledge or consent... One such program is the Youth
Risk Behavior Surveillance System (YRBSS).
al., Youth
Risk Behavior Surveillance — United States, 2007, CDC, www.cdc.gov, accessed March 18, 2009.)
CDC Surveillance Summaries: Youth
Risk Behavior Surveillance — United States, 1997.
(2) The 1997 Youth
Risk Behavior Surveillance, a national school - based survey conducted by the CDC confirms other national trend data on the sexual behavior of American teens: rates of sexual experience have stabilized and condom use has increased for teens in the 1990s.
Results from the most recently published 2013 National Youth
Risk Behavior Surveillance Survey (YRBSS), given to students in grades 9 — 12, showed that:
For example, with respect to behaviors that contribute to intentional injuries, according to the Youth
Risk Behavior Surveillance Survey, 36.6 % of high school students reported having been in a physical fight in the past month, with 14.8 % of the fights occurring on school property, 3.5 % were injured in a physical fight and five percent of students missed school because of feeling unsafe [1].
The Youth
Risk Behavior Surveillance System monitors behaviors that increase the risk of health related problems among adolescents.
One piece of evidence comes from the Centers for Disease Control and its Youth
Risk Behavior Surveillance System.
The finding is unique, according to Garnett, due to the fact that most states, as well as the National Youth
Risk Behavior Surveillance Survey, asks about sexual orientation, but not gender identity.
Texting while driving among high school students: Analysis of 2011 data from the National Youth
Risk Behavior Surveillance System (YRBSS).
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) tracks certain youth at - risk behaviors that they have deemed important and observable in their Youth
Risk Behavior Surveillance System (YRBSS).
The report with all youth risk behaviors listed can be found here, Youth
Risk Behavior Surveillance System: Selected 2011 National Health Risk Behaviors and Health Outcomes by Sex.
«Youth
risk behavior surveillance - United States, 2009.
National Survey on Drug Use and Health Retirement Confidence Survey Survey of Consumer Finances Survey of Income and Program Participation Youth
Risk Behavior Surveillance System
Not exact matches
Bisakha Sen, Ph.D., associate professor of health care policy at UAB, used health
behavior data for whites and blacks from Alabama and Mississippi taken from the national Behavioral
Risk Factor
Surveillance System and took a method used in economics to analyze gender wage disparities.