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The HHS Syndication Storefront allows you to syndicate (import) content from many HHS websites directly into your own website or application. These services are provided by HHS free of charge.

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CDC

YRBS 2015 Results | CDC Online Newsroom | CDC

youth  smoking  cigarette  driving  YRBS  injuries  adolescents  Tobacco Use  Youth Risk Behavior Survey  high school students  Texting  TV  condom use  soda  fighting  school property  e-mailing  sexually active  computer  pop 

Teen smoking rates are at the lowest level (11%) since CDC began monitoring in 1991!

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CDC

Consumption of Alcoholic Beverages and Liquor Consumption byMichigan High School Students, 2011

public health  CDC  alcohol  chronic disease  Binge Drinking  Preventing Chronic Disease  PCD  Preventing Chronic Disease Journal  National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion  NCCDPHP  underage drinking  high school students  alcohol mixed with energy drinks 

Preventing Chronic Disease (PCD) is a peer-reviewed electronic journal established by the National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion. PCD provides an open exchange of information and knowledge among researchers, practitioners, policy makers, and others who strive to improve the health of the public through chronic disease prevention.

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CDC

Preventing Chronic Disease | Prevalence of Sleep Duration onan Average School Night Among 4 Nationally RepresentativeSuccessive Samples of American High School Students, 2007-2013 -CDC

CDC  sleep  Preventing Chronic Disease  PCD  high school students  YRBSS 

Consistency, quality, and duration of sleep are important determinants of health. We describe sleep patterns among demographically defined subgroups from the Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System reported in 4 successive biennial representative samples of American high school students (2007 to 2013). Across the 4 waves of data collection, 6.2% to 7.7% of females and 8.0% to 9.4% of males reported obtaining 9 or more hours of sleep. Insufficient duration of sleep is pervasive among American high school students. Despite substantive public health implications, intervention research on this topic has received little attention.

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