Sex Education Resources for Teens, Parents and Educators

January 31, 2009 by deborah  
Filed under Childhood Issues

Answer is based at Rutgers University and is a nationally known program that provides sexual education to adolescents. The sites below provide much information and resources for teens, parents and educators.

Answer in the Media

A full listing of the tremendous media coverage that Answer has received over the past several months is on our Web site at http://answer.rutgers.edu/page/answerinthenews/, but here are some highlights:

“Teens & Sex”, posted on Parents.tv, the online show of Parents magazine, features TISHE core staff member Eva Goldfarb, Ph.D., Sex, Etc. managing editor Lucinda Holt and Sex, Etc. teen editors Karen Choucrallah and Allie Hough.Two Op-Eds, one for the New York Daily News (“Blaming TV for Teen Pregnancy Is a Convenient Excuse,”) and the other for the Courier-Post (”Teens Need Comprehensive Sex Education”) were published in late 2008.I was interviewed for the TODAYShow.com online, “Survey: Unprotected Sex Common Among Teens,” reacting to a recent survey about the sexual habits among teen girls. It is exciting to see that Answer is being viewed as the go-to place for comments and guidance around sexuality issues—and equally pleasing that sexuality education is receiving long overdue media attention!Sex, Etc.

The newly released Winter 2009 issue of Sex, Etc. magazine explores the theme, “Chill Out,” with stories about issues that cause concern amongst their peer—and help calm those fears.Over 100 teens have added their profiles already to “Your Voice, Your Rights,” the new advocacy section on the Sex, Etc. Web site. Know any teens who want their voices heard? Please send them to http://www.sexetc.org/yourvoice/uyv/survey

Donations To NOFASNJ Are Welcomed

January 30, 2009 by rosie  
Filed under Did You Know?

Click here to donate to NOFASNJ Today!

Prevent Childhood Injuries!

January 30, 2009 by deborah  
Filed under Childhood Issues

This letter comes to us from colleagues at the Center for Injury Prevention and Control at CDC.

Dear Colleague:

We are writing to call your attention to new resources from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Injury

Center on child injury prevention.

Unintentional injuries—such as those caused by burns, drowning, falls, poisoning and road traffic—are the leading cause of morbidity and mortality among children in the United States.  Each year, among those 0 to 19 years of age, more than 12,000 people die from unintentional injuries and more than 9 million are treated in emergency departments for nonfatal injuries. In conjunction with the World Health Organization and UNICEF’s joint launch of the World Report on Child Injury Prevention (2008), the CDC’s Injury Center is pleased to announce the release of new resources for the prevention of child injuries in the United States.

  • Protect the Ones You Love: Child Injuries Are Preventable. This is a new initiative to raise parents’ awareness about the leading causes of child injury and how they can be prevented. As part of the initiative, the Injury

    Center has developed a number of resources that can be used to help parents to keep their children injury-free, including fact sheets, podcasts, e-cards, and media and event planning guides. Find these and other tools, all available free of charge, at http://www.cdc.gov/safechild/.

· CDC Childhood Injury Report: Patterns of Unintentional Injuries among 0-19 Year olds in the United States, 2000 – 2006. This data report provides an overview of unintentional injuries related to drowning, falls, fires or burns, transportation, poisoning, and suffocation, among others, during the period 2000 to 2006. Results are presented by age group and sex, as well as the geographic distribution of injury death rates by state. Read or download a copy of the report at http://www.cdc.gov/safechild/Child_Injury_Data.htm.

  • Child Injury Prevention Video. On December 11, 2008, the Injury

    Center brought together a network of professionals to look at how policy, communications/media outreach, and national and local programs can be used to empower parents in their efforts to protect children. Watch a video of the highlights of the meeting at http://www.cdc.gov/SafeChild/about.htm.

We are asking you to use these resources to educate, build awareness, and promote childhood injury prevention in the United States. Working together, we can keep our children safe and help them live to their full potential. Sincerely,

Ileana Arias, PhD Director,

National

Center for Injury Prevention and ControlCenters for Disease Control and Prevention

Grant Baldwin, PhD, MPH Director, Division of Unintentional Injury Prevention

National

Center for Injury Prevention and Control

Babies Know: A Little Dirt Is Good For You

January 29, 2009 by ellen  
Filed under Childhood Issues

According to an article in the New York Times, the hygiene hypothesis suggests that a healthy immune system is stimulated by organisms that enter the body along with dirt.  To read the entire article click here.

The Epidemic That Wasn’t

January 29, 2009 by ellen  
Filed under Childhood Issues

According to an article in the New York Times, researchers are systematically following children who were exposed to cocaine before birth and findng that the long-term effects may be relatively small.  To read the entire article click here.

A Parent’s Challenge With A Lead Poisoned Child

January 15, 2009 by rosie  
Filed under Childhood Issues

Read a captivating  blog post about a parent’s battle with lead poisoning. This blog post is on NJ.com

Tell us what you think.

New Jersey DMAHS Revised Lead Poisoning Flyer Available

January 12, 2009 by rosie  
Filed under Childhood Issues

New Jersey Department of Human Services,Division of Medical Assistance and Health Services (DMAHS) has revised their lead poisoning informational flyer. This flyer’s new look is in both English and Spanish. It would be great for general distribution and can be downloaded and printed for your use.

Get a .pdf of the flyer, Keep Children Safe From Lead in English and Spanish

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