A pril 11, 2001 Page A5 ^Iorllanò (ßbseruer B Health/Education Local Team Keeps Families Child Abuse Free April is Child Abuse Pre­ vention Month, but a local team of health care and public safety officials are helping keep children safe every month o f the year. In 1998, Dr. Leila Keltner, m ed ical d ire c to r o f the CARES NW child abuse as­ sessment center, conceptual­ ized an educational program to teach baby-sitting aged chil­ dren in engaging, interactive ways about shaken baby syn­ drome. From that initial idea. Kids Preventing Child Abuse was created in partnership with Legacy Health System, Or­ egon Health Sciences Univer­ sity, Portland Public Schools, Kaiser Permanente and the - Portland Police Bureau. “At that time, nearly one third of the children seen at CARES NW were abused by other children,” Keltner said. proposed to make free, multi-dimensional, interac­ tive presentations to hun­ dreds o f children per year on the topics of shaken baby syndrome, domestic vio­ lence and the effects of drugs and alcohol on ba­ bies. Today, the Kids Pre­ venting Child Abuse pre­ sentations teach middle and high school children from Multnomah, Clackamas and Washington counties in a variety of ways. For example, children will observe the insides o f a shaken, uncooked egg; lis­ ten to strategies for work­ ing with a crying baby; view X-ray images of the brains of shaken or injured babies; view a video showing com­ Students from the Portland area listen to a presentation on the topics o f shaken baby syndrome, domestic violence parative behaviors of drug- and the effects o f drugs and alcohol on babies: affected babies and non­ “The staff felt that educating consequences of their conduct save lives.” drug-affected babies; tour a preteens and teens about the with younger children would The CARES NW staff then neo-natal intensive care unit to view babies with drug-af­ fected complications; and hear a presentation on domestic violence from a law enforce­ ment officer. D uring the 1999-2000 school year, approximately 230 students received this training, but this year, KPCA will reach nearly 830 ethni- cally-diverse boys and girls. “The importance of engag­ ing young people in learning and incorporating these les­ sons into their lives is the es­ sence of this program,” said Thomas Aschenbrenner of the Northwest Health Foundation, one of the KPCA sponsors. “It’s amazing to see these children learn to care for other children in safe ways.” For more information on the Kids Preventing Child Abuse program, call the Public Rela­ tions Department at 503-415- 5725. Underage Smoking Called ‘Pediatric Disease9 Despite tobacco industry agreement to stop using advertising icons such as Joe Camel, kids continue to pick up habit (A P )— T he state attorney general says the key to saving kids from a lifelong addiction to nicotine lies in expanding sm oke-free environm ents, program s to quit sm oking an d reduc­ ing youth access to tobacco prod­ ucts. H ardy M yers offered his recom ­ m endations last w eek after releasing a report by his C om m ittee on Kids and Tobacco. “ Sm oking, as our state epidem i­ ologist says, is a pediatric disease,” M yers said. D e sp ite th e to b a c c o in d u stry agreem ent to stop using advertising icons such as Joe C am el, kids con­ tinue to pick up a habit that could prem aturely end their ow n lives, M yers said. C arson C lover, an A shland teen w ho attended M yers’ press confer­ ence, said the popular cartoon figure m ay be gone, but tobacco com panies are still targeting his age group. “ T h ey ’re trying to get us to be lifetim e consum ers,” he said. A c c o rd in g to th e a tto r n e y g en e ral’s report, roughly 50,000 O r­ egon children in grades six through 12 regularly sm oke cigarettes, and 90 percent o f all sm okers w ere hooked as teens. But if a child can survive adolescence without taking up the deadly habit, they likely never will, Myers said. Spending m oney on youth pre­ vention is the key. “The payoffis that m ost o f them w ill not start sm oking,” he said. M yers said he w ants the L egisla­ ture to com m it at least $24 m illion o f the state’s tobacco settlem ent fund to prevention. C urrently, the state spends 30 percent o f the per capita expenditure recom m ended by the Centers for D isease Control, or about $2 per person. The increased funding w ould boost that level to around $6 per person. Local governm ents have already taken steps to com bat youth sm oking and M yers said he d o esn ’t w ant the state to interfere w ith those m easures. “ It’s extrem ely im portant that the integrity o f that effort be preserved politically,” he said. International AIDS Funds Approved T he U.S. S enate has passed an am endm ent crafted by Senators. G or­ don Sm ith, R -O re. and Bill Frist, R- Tenn. to increase next y e a r’s funding for international A ID S /H IV efforts by $200 million. T he regions that w ill benefit from the funds include not only sub-S a­ haran A frica but countries in South and N ear E ast A sia and the form er Soviet U nion, all o f w hich are cur­ rently being overw helm ed by the epidem ic. T he m easure passed by unanim ous voice vote. “ These funds are a crucial part o f ou r co u n try ’s attem pts to battle d is­ ease and alleviate w idespread pain and suffering for som e o f the w o rld ’s m ost im poverished regions,” said Sm ith. “ T he international A ID S cri­ sis also im pacts U.S. national secu­ rity and econom ic interests. By in­ creasing these funds, w e not only help those suffering from HI V/AIDS, w e also foster p olitical stability and econom ic developm ent abroad.” In addition to providing additional funds for this y e a r’s budget, the am endment also increases AIDS/HIV funding by $500 m illion in 2003. Spending levels w ill reach m ore than $ 1 billion dollars annually w ithin the next two years. L ast year, Senator Smith authored sim ilar legislation that provided funding for International H IV /A ID S efforts in Africa. H alf o f All US. High School Students Have Access to Guns (A P )— Nearly half o f the nation’s high school students have easy access to guns, and more than one in five high school boys have taken a weapon to school in the last year, according to a new survey. Forty-seven percent o f high school students said they could obtain a gun i fthey wanted to, while 22 percent o f middle school students said they could get a firearm, according to a nationwide survey conducted last year by the non­ profit, nonpartisan Josephson Institute ofEthics, based in M anna del Rey, Cali f. Students who use drugs and alcohol at school are even more likely to obtain and cany weapons, the survey o f about 15,800 high school and middle school students revealed. The survey has a marginofertor ofplus orminus 3 percent­ age points. The study revealed that 19 percent o f high school boys and 9 per­ cent o f middle school boys admitted to being drunkat school within the last year, compared to 12 percent o f high school girls and 5 percent o f middle school girls. While 14percentofhighschool students and 11 percentofmiddleschoolstudents reported bringing a weapon to school within the last twelve months, 48 percent ofhigh school students and 57 percent of middle school students who admitted coming to school drunk said they brought a weapon to school dunng that period. The prev alence o f weapons in schools and a cavalier attitude toward violence has taken its toll on students’ peace of mind, the survey showed. More than one in three high school students surveyed said they don’t feel safe at school. HEALTHCARE YOU CAN AFFORD Self-Employed, Under-Insured, Uninsured, Have Pre- Existing Conditions? Can’t Afford High Premiums? "My experience at Oregon State L4 J unique. 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