childrenshealthfund.org
C H I L D R E N ’ S H E A LT H F U N D WINTER 2015
Ensuring kids are healthy and ready to learn
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Better Learning In Sight. New glasses are bringing lessons into focus for hundreds of children at Healthy and Ready to Learn demonstration schools in New York City.
Out of Medicine, Out of School At age four, José was already in danger of falling behind in school. The reason? Asthma. The preschooler from Austin, Texas takes numerous medications for asthma and allergies. But when his mother’s Medicaid benefits lapsed and she ran out of medicines for José, she couldn’t afford to pay for them herself. José was sent home from pre-Kindergarten out of concern for his untreated asthma. He’d already missed a full week, and there was no solution in sight. Dr. Marilyn Doyle, medical director of the Children’s Health
Getting asthma under control keeps kids in class
ids have a job to do, and that is going to school and doing their best so they can succeed in life. But not all kids are ready for this job. Children raised in poverty often lack access to health care, meaning they go to school with untreated health problems, or they stay home sick and miss critical class time. As adults, our job is solving this problem. That’s why Children’s Health Fund is working to help close the learning gap and ensure all America’s children are healthy and ready to learn. Our multifaceted approach includes a demonstration program at three New York City public elementary schools, where we are showing what can be achieved when you tackle multiple health barriers to learning simultaneously in a supportive school environment. Our innovative model places a school health coordinator in each school who works with teachers, school administrators, parents and the students themselves to identify kids with health barriers and connect them to care. Because behavioral health issues destabilize so many low-income children, the Healthy and Ready to Learn school-based
Fund program in Austin, heard about this situation from a colleague at Dell Children’s Hospital. “Send him to our mobile clinic,” Dr. Doyle suggested. When José arrived with his mom, nurse practitioner Lisa Butterworth examined him. Half an hour later, the family left with prescriptions for all his medications. His mom could fill the prescriptions at no cost at a local pharmacy. Crisis solved. “There was no place else they could go to get the medication CONTINUED ON PAGE 2
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