Sign Petition: 13-Year-Old Denied Admission to School Because of HIV-Status


How many of us can claim ignorance surrounding the topic of HIV? Undoubtedly, too many. With over 33 million people living with HIV and AIDS globally, you would think we, as a society and community, would care to become more well-versed.

And this question comes at a very pertinent time in our country, for 2011 marks the 30th anniversary of the emergence of HIV. Efforts have been made and headway has been achieved, yet the story of a young 13-year-old boy in Hershey, Pennsylvania (PA), proves, unabashedly, the amount of work that needs to be done and the overwhelming surge of ignorance that must be eradicated.

The Milton Hershey School in Hershey, PA – a school that prides itself on serving “children from families of low income, limited resources, and social need” – recently denied a young 13-year-old admission to their school because of his known HIV+ status. The school recent said in a statement, “We cannot accommodate the needs of students with chronic communicable diseases that pose a direct threat to the health and safety of others.”

Let’s examine more closely the reasons why the Milton Hershey School is exemplifying extremely outdated, archaic, and stigmatizing attitudes towards this particular case.

1. Unlike the common cold, Tuberculosis, and various other communicable illnesses, HIV is not considered a highly contagious infection, and has been proven by society and science within the past 30 years that the probability of spreading through normal, everyday interaction is slim to nill.

2. “It shouldn’t be the responsibility of a 13-year-old boy to teach the Milton Hershey School about the science of HIV or the moral obligation educators have to meet the needs of all students,” said Lawrence, the young man who has started a petition against the actions of the school on Change.org.

3. The overtly ignorant and hurtful claims from the school against this 13-year-old boy only serve to exacerbate the stigmatization of those individuals living with HIV, all the while contributing to a culture of ignorance that will only proliferate these false truths surrounding HIV.

Want to know what you can do? Join BABES Network and sign this petition on Change.org, telling the Milton Hershey School that their actions against this 13-year-old boy are discriminatory, ignorant, and hurtful, and will not be tolerated.

Bloggers Unite around World Prematurity Day


Today is World Prematurity Day.

According to the March of Dimes, more than 500,000 babies are born prematurely in the United States each year. What’s more unsettling than this statistic is the fact that the USA’s premature birth rate has risen by 36 percent over the past 25 years.

In partnership with the March of Dimes, Bloggers Unite has gathered together blog posts on prematurity to raise awareness on this day. Bloggers Unite is an attempt to harness the power of the blogosphere to make the world a better place. Visit the Bloggers Unite event site for World Prematurity Day to read posts by:

The March of Dimes encourages each of us to help them raise awareness:

  1. Put a badge on your blog to spread the word.
  2. On November 17, tell the story of a baby you love.
  3. Find out about care for premature babies in your area and what more needs to be done.

We need to fight ― because babies shouldn’t have to.

No-cost preventive services


This morning, the Kaiser Family Foundation published a press release and new fact sheet on the preventive services that private health plans must now cover, as directed by the Affordable Care Act (health care reform). These requirements went into effect August 1, 2011.

The preventive services that private health plans and insurance companies must now cover include:

  • Routine immunizations (influenza, HPV, tetanus, hepatitis A & B, and more)
  • Screenings for conditions like cancer and high cholesterol
  • Preventive services for children and youth (behavioral and developmental assessments, iron and fluoride supplements, and screening for autism, vision impairment, lipid disorders, tuberculosis, and certain genetic diseases)
  • Preventive services for women (annual well-woman check-ups, testing for STIs and HIV, support for breastfeeding, contraception methods, and screening and counseling for domestic violence)

On top of having to provide these health and screening services, private health plans and insurance companies may not charge co-payments, deductibles or co-insurance to patients. However, these requirements do not apply to any plan that maintains “grandfathered” status – meaning that the plan must have been in existence prior to March 23, 2010 and cannot have made significant changes to the plan’s coverage.

To read about these services and their impact in-depth, please check out the Kaiser Family Foundation’s fact sheet.

This is a follow-up to our post in early August, after the Department of Health and Human Services announced that women may now receive preventive health services at no additional cost.

Let’s Do This! Healthy Eating, Active Lifestyles & Tobacco-Free in King Co.


Public Health – Seattle & King County launched a new initiative this month – Let’s Do This! – a public awareness campaign and self-proclaimed movement determined to “make it easy to eat healthy and to live actively,” “work together for tobacco-free housing and colleges” and “champion healthier schools, child care and parks, and less tobacco.”

King County residents are coming together to bring healthier foods to neighborhood stores, improve the bike-ability of our streets, provide soda alternatives at schools, after-school programs and child care centers, and cut down on tobacco marketing to children.

Read more about this exciting initiative and upcoming events on Let’s Do This’s website, check out their Twitter feed, and read some articles about what different communities are doing:

Global & Rainier Food Markets Join Healthy Foods Campaign
Food-centered STARTS program gives 8 teens a recipe for living well
King County Grapples With Food Distribution Networks
Promoting healthy school routes

Many thanks to @VolunteerYWCA and @franknam sharing information about this campaign!

-Katie Barnett

Pregnancy & Nutrition: some helpful hints


Did you know if you eat half a plate of veggies at meal times, you will get all the folic acid you need? Or that you need vitamin D in order to absorb calcium?  These  are just a couple of the helpful tips our Moms-2-Be group learned from Amy and Sarah, who joined us from the Nutrition and Psychology program at Bastyr University.

Amy discussed with us the importance of eating whole foods. Whole foods are foods that are not processed or refined – basically, food that’s not been changed in any way, or that has been changed very little. It’s what you eat straight from the garden.

Processed foods are manufactured through different methods to transform raw ingredients into packaged foods. These foods need certain ingredients so they will last longer on the shelves.  Some of the artificial ingredients used include monosodium glutamate (MSG), flavors, preservatives, hydrogenated oil, fillers, and artificial sweeteners. Whole foods typically do not contain added ingredients, such as salt, carbohydrates, or fat and are just better for you. LESS IS MORE!

Also! Say goodbye to the Nutritional Pyramid, and take a look at the new “My Plate” planner. This is the new model for measuring your daily intake of nutrition, and it’s super helpful!  Here are some quick tips:

Grains: 6 oz./day

Veggies: 2.5 cups/day

Fruits: 1.5-2 cups/day

Milk: 3 cups/day

Proteins: 5-5.5 oz./day (1 oz. of protein is equal to a tablespoon of peanut butter, 1/4 cup cooked beans or tofu, 1 egg,  12 almonds, 12 pistachios) another hint: 3 oz. is about the size of a deck of cards or the palm or your hand.

And here are some helpful hints from Moms-2-Be participants have for getting  protein and nutritional needs throughout the day!

1. Cook a dozen hard-boiled eggs at the beginning of the week! Eggs are packed with protein, and hardboiled eggs are great on their own, or in a salad with some fruit and nuts. However you like them, they are easy and quick.

2.   Canned salmon is a fast and easy source for omega, protein and vitamin D.  You can make salmon patties for salmon burgers or mix it like tuna fish for sandwiches.

3.   Some other fish is good to eat, but don’t eat too much because it contains mercury. You can eat up to 12 oz. a week of shrimp, salmon, pollock, catfish, and canned light tuna.  It’s recommended that you eat no more than 6 oz. of Albacore White Tuna.

3. NUTS! NUTS! NUTS! Carry a bag of mixed nuts around with you! Nuts are a great source of protein, iron and omega!  Add some nuts with your salad to give it a little extra crunchy kick!

4. A tablespoon of molasses is also a great source of iron!

5. Another helpful tip is to cook all your deli meats before eating them and putting them in sandwiches. This will help you avoid Listeria.

6. Remember to avoid non-pasteurized cheeses and milk, such as cotija, brie, blue cheese and feta.  Hard cheeses are your best bet!

By eating healthy you are ensuring you are getting all your nutritional needs and that of your growing baby. The foods you eat are what helps your baby develop!

-Logan Hunt

Genetically modified food toxins found in the blood of 93% of unborn babies


Healthy Birth Outcomes – YWCA wants to highlight how genetically modified (GM) foods are harming unborn babies and mothers everyday. We want to raise awareness so we can start to fight for foods to be labeled as GM on the shelves of grocery stores. It is our right to know what we are putting into our bodies, and how it may affect the health and wellness of our most vulnerable.

Below is an article published last month by the UK’s Daily Mail in the UK on genetically modified (GM) food toxins and the impact they have on unborn babies.

-Logan Hunt

GM food toxins found in the blood of 93% of unborn babies

GM firms claimed toxins were destroyed in the gut
By Sean Poulter
20th May 2011
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-1388888/GM-food-toxins-blood-93-unborn-babies.html

Toxins implanted into GM food crops to kill pests are reaching the bloodstreams of women and unborn babies, alarming research has revealed.

A landmark study found 93 per cent of blood samples taken from pregnant women and 80 percent from umbilical cords tested positive for traces of the chemicals.

Millions of acres in North and South America are planted with GM corn containing the toxins,which is fed in vast quantities to farm livestock around the world – including Britain.

However, it is now clear the toxins designed to kill crop pests are reaching humans and babies in the womb – apparently through food. It is not known what, if any, harm this causes but there is speculation it could lead to allergies, miscarriage, abnormalities or even cancer.

To date the industry has always argued that if these toxins were eaten by animals or humans they would be destroyed in the gut and pass out of the body, thus causing no harm.

Food safety authorities in Britain and Europe have accepted these assurances on the basis that GM crops are effectively no different to those produced using conventional methods.

But the latest study appears to blow a hole in these claims and has triggered calls for a ban on imports and a total overhaul of the safety regime for GM crops and food.

Most of the global research which has been used to demonstrate the safety of GM crops has been funded by the industry itself.

The new study was carried out by independent doctors at the Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, at the University of Sherbrooke Hospital Centre in Quebec, Canada.

They took blood samples from 30 pregnant women and 39 other women who were not having a baby. They were looking for residues of the pesticides associated with the cultivation of GM food. These include so-called Bt toxins, which are implanted using GM techniques into corn and some other crops.

Traces of Bt toxin were found in the blood of 93 per cent of the pregnant mothers – 28 out of 30. It was also found in 80 per cent of the umbilical cords – 24 out of 30.

In the non-pregnant group, traces were found in the blood of 69 per cent – 27 out of 39. It is thought the toxin is getting into the human body as a result of eating meat, milk and eggs from farm livestock fed GM corn.

The Canadian team told the scientific journal Reproductive Toxicology: ‘This is the first study to highlight the presence of pesticides associated with genetically modified foods in maternal, foetal and non-pregnant women’s blood.’
They said the Bt toxin was ‘clearly detectable and appears to cross the placenta to the foetus’.

Calling for action, the team said: ‘Given the potential toxicity of these environmental pollutants and the fragility of the foetus, more studies are needed.’

The director of GM Freeze, an umbrella group for community, consumer and environmental organisations opposed to GM farming, described the research as ‘very significant’.

Pete Riley said: ‘This research is a major surprise as it shows that the Bt proteins have survived the human digestive system and passed into the blood supply – something that regulators said could not happen.

‘Regulators need to urgently reassess their opinions, and the EU should use the safeguard clauses in the regulations to prevent any further GM Bt crops being cultivated or imported for animal feed or food until the potential health implications have been fully evaluated.’

The Agriculture Biotechnology Council, which speaks for the GM industry, questioned the reliability and value of the research.

Its chairman, Dr Julian Little, said: ‘The study is based on analysis that has been used in previous feeding studies and has been found to be unreliable.’
He said the toxins found are also used in other farming systems and gardening ‘with no harm to human health’.

Dr Little said: ‘Biotech crops are rigorously tested for safety prior to their use and over two trillion meals made with GM ingredients have been safely consumed around the world over the past 15 years without a single substantiated health issue.’

Breastfeed them into an honor student


Who knew that breastfeeding your baby for at least six months will make your baby smarter? Well – at least help your child become a better student… according to a new study by the Telethon Institute for Child Health Research in Perth, Australia.

Infants who are breastfed for at least six months do better in school at 10 years old compared to 10 year olds who had been bottle-fed. Results from this study were significantly significant for boys who were breastfed for at least six months. These boys received higher grades in math, reading, spelling and writing; girls who were breastfed showed an increase (although statistically insignificant) in their reading scores.

Researchers adjusted for factors including family income, the mother’s education, and how much the child was read to at home.

A possible reason as to why breastfeeding impacted the boys in this study more than girls is that “a number of studies [have] found that boys are more reliant than girls on maternal attention and encouragement for the acquisition of cognitive and language skills. If breastfeeding facilitates mother-child interactions, then we would expect the positive effects of this bond to be greater in males compared with females, as we observed.”

Whether you have a boy or a girl, breastfeeding your child supports their early childhood development and gives them a great head start!

Doheny, Kathleen. (20 Dec 2010). Do Breast-Fed Baby Boys Grow Into Better Students? Retrieved from http://health.msn.com/kids-health/articlepage.aspx?cp-documentid=100268313.

-Katie Barnett