Listen to Angela Glover Blackwell, Commissioner and PolicyLink founder and CEO, and Robin Mockenhaupt, Ph.D., M.P.H., Chief of Staff for the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, on the importance of starting early to give all children the chance to grow up healthy. The recommendations resulted from a year-long investigation into factors outside of the health care system that influence health. Released in April, the recommendations identify programs and policies from across sectors – and from around the nation – that are making a difference in the health of all Americans.For policies to support healthy childhood development.
skip to main |
skip to sidebar
Thursday, August 13, 2009
Growing Up Healthy
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Commission hosted a webinar about the importance of early childhood health. A recording and the materials from "A Focus on Starting Early" are available.
Labels:
Early Care and Education
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Contributors
Search This Blog
Labels
- Family Economic Success (147)
- Child Well-being (123)
- Poverty (97)
- Early Care and Education (89)
- Data (71)
- State Budgets (71)
- Child Welfare (62)
- Federal Budget (60)
- Results (55)
- Education (53)
- Stimulus (48)
- Foster Care (47)
- Racial Equity (47)
- Policymakers (43)
- Juvenile Detention (41)
- Job Training (30)
- Ensuring Children are Healthy and Prepared to Succeed in School (29)
- Food Stamps (28)
- Healthy Children (26)
- Home Foreclosures (15)
- Medicaid (15)
- Partnerships (11)
- Low-income (10)
- Affordable Housing (8)
- SNAP (8)
- Affordable Care Act (6)
- Guest Blogger (6)
- Improve Early Grade-Level Reading (6)
- Reintegration of Ex-Offenders (6)
- Courts (5)
- Home Visiting (5)
- Sequester (5)
- mental health (4)
- Census (3)
- EITC (3)
- Health Equity (3)
- Higher Education (3)
- Income inequality (3)
- TANF (3)
- Transitioning Youth (3)
- Video (3)
- health insurance (3)
- juvenile justice (3)
- Collaboration (2)
- Disparities in Health Care (2)
- Minimum wage (2)
- Teen Pregnancy (2)
- immigration (2)
- place-based initiatives (2)
- who pays (2)
- Arizona v. United States (1)
- Black male education (1)
- Black men going to college (1)
- Buffett Rule (1)
- Child Tax Credit (1)
- Criminal Justice (1)
- DMC (1)
- Introduction to Website (1)
- Mexican migration (1)
- Minority Health Month (1)
- NIH Minority Health Promotion Day (1)
- Navigator Program (1)
- Promise Neighborhoods (1)
- SOTU (1)
- Strengthening Families (1)
- Substance Abuse (1)
- Success Stories (1)
- asset tests (1)
- benefits of immigrant integration (1)
- http://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gif (1)
- immigrant demographic (1)
- just tax (1)
- progressive tax (1)
- regressive tax (1)
- social security (1)
- solitary confinement (1)
- tax policy (1)
- tax returns (1)
- unemployment insurance (1)
- welcome (1)
Blog Archive
-
▼
2009
(215)
-
▼
August
(23)
- Child Development Screenings and Child Welfare
- Tracking Stimulus Spending
- Reducing Juvenile Detention, Saves Money and Impro...
- New Report on Racial Disparities
- Federal Funding for Asset Building
- Funding Sources for Community-based Early Learning...
- Connecticut Uses a Results Frame to Improve Outcom...
- Can We Reduce Poverty in 10 Years?
- How Are States Really Using Stimulus Money?
- PreK-3rd Reforms, Fighting "Fade-Out"
- Mandated Reporters, Outcomes of Referrals
- Stimulus Money for Early Childhood State Advisory ...
- Reforming the Juvenile Justice System
- Growing Up Healthy
- Residents of Suburbs Seeking Food Assistance Faste...
- New Report: Juvenile Detention Makes Kids Worse
- Poverty, Prosperity, Social Justice and Work
- Foundations and the Issue of Race
- Doctors Advocate for Juvenile Justice Reforms
- Conditions and Trends in 10 American Cities
- Does the 2010 Federal Budget Help Americans Build ...
- America's Children, a National and State-by-State ...
- Status of 2010 Federal Funding for Early Childhood...
-
▼
August
(23)
No comments:
Post a Comment