“Brain Hero” is a new video by the Center for the Developing Child that shows how actions by a range of people in the family and community impact child development. It’s creators say it is based loosely on such games as “Guitar Hero,” “SimCity,” and “The Game of Life,” and portrays how actions taken by parents, teachers, policymakers, and others can affect life outcomes for both the child and the surrounding community.
“Brain Hero” Video Worth Watching
Young Child Risk Calculator
The National Center for Children in Poverty (NCCP) released a new online tool, The Young Child Risk Calculator, which shows users how many children under age six in each state are experiencing serious risks to their development. The tool allows users to select from various age groups as well as economic and other risk factors known to affect children’s development. The risk factors used in the tool are known to increase the chance of poor health, school, and developmental outcomes for young children. NCCP also released their latest Early Childhood State Policy Profiles, a comprehensive view of state policies in the areas of health, early care and education, and parenting and economic supports, that affect the health and well-being of young children in low-income families.
Nearly 1 in 5 North Carolinians have difficulty affording food
An estimated 1.6 million North Carolinians–nearly 1 in 5–struggled with limited or uncertain access to food at some point in 2009, according to a national study released yesterday by Feeding America, a nonprofit hunger-relief organization. Action for Children North Carolina shared the following information.
“These data offer an important glimpse into hunger at the community-level in North Carolina,” said Laila Bell, Research and Data Director at Action for Children North Carolina, a statewide research and advocacy organization that tracks quantitative indicators of child well-being through the KIDS COUNT project. “Previous research has shown when individuals and families struggle to put food on the table it is children, our most vulnerable population, who are disproportionately affected.”
The report, Mapping the Meal Gap, used data from the U.S. Census Bureau’s Current Population Survey and administrative sources to generate state- and community-level estimates of the number of people facing food insecurity. Food insecurity is defined as the lack of access to nutritionally adequate foods for all household members.
Food insecurity affects a range of households in North Carolina, not just the poorest. In fact, 35 percent of food insecure North Carolinians earned too much to qualify for the Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program (SNAP, formerly Food Stamps), a national program that helps low-income families bridge the gaps in their household food budgets.
In five North Carolina counties, one in four residents faced food insecurity:
- Edgecombe: 27.6% (14,520 people)
- Scotland: 27.6 % (10,050 people)
- Vance: 25.8% (11,080)
- Warren: 25.3% (4,940 people)
- Halifax: 25.3% (13,940 people)
The report also illuminates community-level disparities in food access and price. In 2009, the average cost of a meal in North Carolina was $2.49, but meal prices varied among counties, ranging from 90 percent of the state average ($2.23) in Rutherford and Lenoir counties to 123 percent ($3.06) in Dare county.
Food insecurity also means missed meals. During 2009, hungry North Carolinians missed more than 275 million meals. The report estimates that an additional $687.2 million would have been needed by food insecure individuals to ensure that no meals were missed.
American Indian, African American and Hispanic communities are at disproportionate risk of food insecurity due, in part, to higher-than-average poverty and unemployment rates that reduce economic security and undermine families’ ability to afford food. Robeson county was cited in the report as one of 11 counties in the nation with both a large American Indian population (36 percent) and high rates of food insecurity (23 percent).
Families facing food insecurity must prioritize low-cost foods, and cheap meals tend to pack high calories but low nutritional value. As a result, children in food insecure households also face heightened risk of childhood obesity.
“Poor nutrition has been shown to influence health and well-being throughout life, beginning even before birth,” said Bell. “The ability to access routine, nutritious meals is essential for healthy physical and cognitive development. Poor maternal and child nutrition has been linked to low birthweight, a heightened risk of infant mortality and reduced educational and economic outcomes later in life.”
These data come at a time when lawmakers at the state and federal levels are deciding whether to fully fund a cadre of programs serving children who are typically at-risk of hunger.
“These data demonstrate the need for continued interventions to combat the additional challenges children experience as a result of food insecurity,” added Bell. “Without programs like SNAP, WIC, school-day, afterschool and summer feeding programs, as well as health insurance, high-quality early education, and prevention and intervention services, many children in North Carolina would lack important building blocks necessary for proper growth.”
Mapping the Meal Gap is available online at http://feedingamerica.org/our-network/the-studies/map-the-gap.aspx
Forsyth Physician Speaks in Support of Smart Start
Today’s Winston-Salem journal features letters from two early childhood advocates speaking out in support of Smart Start.
Dr. Michael R. Lawless says:
“Smart Start and More at Four have been carefully evaluated and are shown to be successful in achieving their goals. By providing quality child care, they enable parents to work. By enhancing education, they ensure a better educated and taxpaying workforce for the future. Every dollar invested in these programs is returned several times over as gains in future taxes and savings in costs of future unemployment and other support services.”
Nikki Byers, Executive Director of Imprints says:
“Decades of research reveal that most of a child’s brain development takes place before age 5. When young children miss out on experiences during this critical time, achievement gaps emerge. Parents are the prime influences on their children, so it is extremely important that parents receive the knowledge needed to help their children develop and grow.”
To read more, visit the Winston-Salem Journal online.
Research & Reports on Child Health
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Smart Start Provides Critical Support to Preemies
Cindy Redd, M.Ed from the Hospital-Home Intervention Program at Wakemed shared the following:
Wake County SmartStart was one of the first SmartStart programs in NC to provide any support services to premature infants when they funded WakeMed’s Hospital-Home Intervention Program (HHIP)in 2002. HHIP provides support for families while their babies are still in the NICU and offer developmental services after discharge for those that are not eligible for early intervention services, (babies born after 27 weeks or weighing more than 1000 grams.) HHIP also provides continuing education and special training seminars for the early intervention providers serving the eligible babies, in an effort to enhance their expertise and support for our very special little ones.
If NC eliminates or significantly cuts the SmartStart Program, WakeMed’s babies and families will face those early months at home without the extra support that HHIP provides.
Early Childhood Nutrition Programs Receive Welcomed Help
Eight communities across North Carolina will receive funding to improve their early childhood nutrition education. The new program, “Shape NC: Healthy Starts for Young Children,” is expected to reach thousands of preschoolers in a state where more than 31 percent of children ages two to four are considered at risk for becoming obese.
The initiative will work through existing community partnerships and programs to educate young children and their families about nutrition and health. Jennifer MacDougall, health and active communities program manager for The Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina Foundation, explains why her organization is investing $3 million in the effort.
“When budget cuts come, a lot of programs are cut. We definitely view the health and wellness of young children as critical.”
The state’s Smart Start program will administer Shape NC. Each of the eight counties will identify a center to host Shape NC, locations that will become resource centers for other early childhood educators, allowing the program to reach thousands more.
At a time when the economy is tightening budgets in the public sector, the foundation hopes to lead by example, says MacDougall.
“It is a responsibility of corporations to really do the best that they can, with all of the dollars that are available. ”
She says a total of 30 Smart Start programs will receive assistance over the next three years. The first eight are:
- Buncombe County Partnership for Children, Inc.;
- Down East Partnership for Children;
- Guilford County Partnership for Children, Inc.;
- Onslow County Partnership for Children, Inc.;
- Orange County Partnership for Young Children;
- Randolph County Partnership for Children;
- Region A Partnership for Children (serving Cherokee, Clay, Graham, Haywood, Jackson, Macon, and Swain counties, and the Cherokee Indian Reservation); and
- Smart Start of New Hanover County.
Smart Start Partnership to present at Institute for Emerging Issues Annual Forum
Down East Partnership for Children (DEPC) will present the Healthy Kids Collaborative (HKC) at the 26th Annual Emerging Issues Forum in Raleigh on February 7, 2011.
Selected for its leadership, innovative strategies and role in empowering communities to combat the increasing obesity rate amongst children in our communities, DEPC will represent Nash and Edgecombe counties amongst North Carolina and the nation’s top business, nonprofit, academic and professionals in healthcare.
Established in 2007 and funded by the Partnership, HKC has worked to build upon the existing infrastructure that supports healthy lifestyles. In partnership with over 50 area business, government, healthcare and civic organizations, the Collaborative works towards increasing access to nutritional foods, opportunities for physical activity and supporting health care providers with resources and materials for families.
Presenting on behalf of the DEPC, Rocky Mount Mayor, David W. Combs will discuss strategies and steps HKC has taken in Nash and Edgecombe counties to combat early-childhood obesity, how these efforts can be replicated, along with the economic impact it can lead to across the state.
“Healthy, active children are more likely to be successful in school, have higher self-esteem and develop long-term educational goals” said Henrietta Zalkind, Executive Director of the DEPC.
“Being recognized amongst North Carolina’s and the nation’s most creative and innovative thinkers is only one example of how our two counties are developing and implementing solutions for our community and North Carolina” said Zalkind.
Featured speakers for this year’s Forum on Health include CNN’s chief medical correspondent Sanjay Gupta, Andrew Witty, CEO of GlaxoSmithKline, Beverly Perdue Governor, North Carolina and Risa Lavizzo-Mourey, practicing physician and CEO of Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
The Institute for Emerging Issues (IEI) is self described as being a “public policy, think-and-do tank that convenes leaders from business, nonprofit organizations, government and higher education to tackle some of the biggest issues facing North Carolina’s future growth and prosperity” according to their website.
High Quality Early Childhood Results in Better Long-Term Health
North Carolina’s Abecedarian Project is once again making news. Science Daily reports that researchers found that individuals who had received the intensive education intervention starting in infancy had significantly better health and better health behaviors as young adults.
The Abecedarian project was a carefully controlled scientific study of the potential benefits of early childhood education for children from low-income families. Four groups of individuals, born between 1972 and 1977, were randomly assigned as infants to either the early educational intervention group or the control group.
- Children from low-income families received full-time, high-quality educational intervention in a childcare setting from infancy through age 5.
- Each child had an individualized prescription of educational activities.
- Educational activities consisted of “games” incorporated into the child’s day.
- Activities focused on social, emotional, and cognitive areas of development but gave particular emphasis to language.
- Children’s progress was monitored over time with follow-up studies conducted at ages 12, 15, and 21.
- The young adult findings demonstrate that important, long-lasting benefits were associated with the early childhood program.
The lastest study was done by researchers at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health.
Can Obesity Start Before Birth?
“People don’t realize how early this starts,” said Dr. Sarah Armstrong, a pediatrician and the director of Duke Children’s Healthy Lifestyle Program, a clinical treatment program for obese kids.
Dr. Armstrong is quoted in an article titled, “Children’s weight woes might start in the womb,” in the January 2nd issue of the News and Observer. The article is part of a five-day series called the Frontiers of Fat, which is looking at the science and scientists working to better understand and solve the obesity epidemic.
Smart Start is doing something similar. We know that more than 31 percent of North Carolina’s children ages 2 to 4 are overweight or considered at risk for becoming overweight. That’s why with the support of a $3 million grant from the Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina Foundation, we’ve just launched a program to tackle childhood obesity by focusing on young children from birth through age 5. It’s one of the few efforts that focuses on very young children; an important population as the News and Observer article suggests.
Learn more about Shape NC.
Read the News and Observer article.





