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Tag: Childrens
Things Kids Should Know About Black History: Educational Children’s book For Black History Month (Holiday Books for Kids)
Price:$11.56– $10.40
(as of Jan 30,2025 09:40:38 UTC – Details)From the Publisher
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How to celebrate black history month?
Important figures in african american history
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Discover more picture books celebrating black culture & history.
This poetic picture book is a celebration of the diversity and beauty of Black culture. the poem aims to instill a sense of pride and self-acceptance in young readers, and to promote diversity, inclusion and cultural appreciation. ”NEW RELEASE” Beautifully crafted collection of empowering poems designed to inspire, uplift, and celebrate Black girls everywhere. This poetic picture book is an inspiring message to young black boys, encouraging them to pursue their dreams and aspirations. we embark on an extraordinary adventure through Black History, guided by the inspiring tales of remarkable individuals who dared to dream big, break barriers, and change the world. ”NEW RELEASE” A love letter to Black excellence and heritage, encourages kids to embrace their unique story, stand tall in their identity. Fierce And Fearless Women Who Shaped Black HistoryASIN : B0BRXYRLJ5
Publisher : Independently published (January 9, 2023)
Language : English
Paperback : 45 pages
ISBN-13 : 979-8373161923
Item Weight : 4.6 ounces
Dimensions : 8.5 x 0.11 x 8.5 inches
Black History Month is a time to celebrate the achievements and contributions of African Americans throughout history. It is important for children to learn about Black history and the struggles and triumphs of African Americans. Here are some important things kids should know about Black history:1. The Civil Rights Movement: Kids should learn about the Civil Rights Movement and the leaders who fought for equality, such as Martin Luther King Jr., Rosa Parks, and Malcolm X.
2. Slavery and the Underground Railroad: Children should understand the history of slavery in America and the courageous efforts of Harriet Tubman and others to help enslaved people escape to freedom.
3. Famous African American Inventors: Kids should learn about the inventions and innovations of African Americans, such as Garrett Morgan (inventor of the traffic light) and George Washington Carver (inventor of peanut butter).
4. African American Literature and Art: Children should be introduced to the works of famous African American writers and artists, such as Langston Hughes, Maya Angelou, and Jacob Lawrence.
5. Black History in Sports: Kids should know about the accomplishments of African American athletes, such as Jackie Robinson, Serena Williams, and Michael Jordan.
To help children learn about Black history, check out the educational children’s book “Black History Month: Holiday Books for Kids.” This book is filled with colorful illustrations and engaging stories that will teach kids about the important events and figures in Black history. Let’s celebrate Black History Month and educate our children about the rich and diverse history of African Americans.
#Kids #Black #History #Educational #Childrens #book #Black #History #Month #Holiday #Books #Kids,kids and childrenElk and Friends Kids Silverware with Silicone Handle | Childrens Safe Flatware | Kids Utensils | Spoon + Fork + Knife set | 4 years+ | 6 Pieces
Price: $18.99
(as of Jan 30,2025 01:53:48 UTC – Details)
Elk and Friends
SILICONE HANDLE: The Elk and Friends spoon, fork and knife feature a stainless steel tip and a easy to grip ergonomic anti-slip silicone handle making it easy for small hands to hold.
OLDER KIDS: Designed for older kids (4 year+) with longer handles and wider spoon and fork tip. The serrated knife’s edge has a rounded blade with no sharp edges to keep it safe for little fingers. This knife can be safely used to cut everything from meats and veggies encouraging children independence and building self-confidence.
SAFE: Perfect for kids mouths with the rounded edges and deep scoop. There is a sweet little heart rest on the back of the spoon for easy support and to keep the utensil tip away from mess and germs.
QUALITY: Made from food grade high quality stainless steel 18/0 and food grade silicone. Dishwasher Safe. Size Length: knife 7”/17.8cm | spoon 6.5”/16.5cm | fork 6.5”/16.5cm
WHO WE ARE: After more than six years, Elk and Friends have been creating safe, fun and environmentally friendly products for the most precious little people in your life! All products are created from quality, natural materials and independently tested, ensuring each design is 100% safe for your children and the environment. Thanks for supporting small and shopping with Elk & Friends.Customers say
Customers appreciate the flatware set’s durability, size, and color. They find it well-made, suitable for young kids, and easy for their little hands to hold. The soft silicone handles are comfortable for them to grip. Many customers consider it a good cutlery set for toddlers and post-toddler stages. They also like the utensils quality, dishwasher ease, and functionality.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Introducing Elk and Friends Kids Silverware with Silicone Handle!Our children’s safe flatware set is perfect for kids ages 4 and up. Made with high-quality stainless steel and BPA-free silicone handles, these utensils are designed to be safe and easy for little hands to use.
The set includes a spoon, fork, and knife, each with a colorful silicone handle that kids will love. The soft grip handles provide added comfort and control, making mealtime more enjoyable for both kids and parents.
With Elk and Friends Kids Silverware, you can rest assured that your child is using utensils that are durable, safe, and easy to clean. Say goodbye to flimsy plastic utensils and upgrade to our high-quality set that will last for years to come.
Make mealtime fun and safe for your little one with Elk and Friends Kids Silverware. Order your set today and watch your child enjoy using their own special utensils!
#ElkandFriends #KidsSilverware #ChildrensUtensils #SafeFlatware #MealtimeFun
#Elk #Friends #Kids #Silverware #Silicone #Handle #Childrens #Safe #Flatware #Kids #Utensils #Spoon #Fork #Knife #set #years #Pieces,safe
for toddlersElk and Friends Kids Silverware with Silicone Handle | Childrens Safe Flatware | Toddler Utensils | Baby Spoons + Forks | Stainless Steel Cutlery
Price: $16.99
(as of Jan 29,2025 23:09:48 UTC – Details)From the brand
Glass + Stainless Steel Jars
Dishwasher + Microwave Safe
Baby, Toddler + Kids Utensils
Stainless Steel Travel Buddies
For First Bites
BABY/TODDLER SAFE: The Elk and Friends spoons + forks feature a stainless steel narrow tips and an easy to grip ergonomic anti-slip silicone handle making it easy for small hands to hold
INNOVATIVE + FUN: Elk and Friends puts the fun back into feeding with this colorful and cute cutlery; An innovative design with the sweet little heart rest on the back, for easy support and to keep the utensil tip away from mess and germs
SAFE: Perfect for babies and toddlers’ mouths with the rounded edges and narrow tip, the spoon also has a deep scoop; This cutlery has been designed entirely for young one’s needs
SAFE: Perfect for babies and toddlers mouths with the rounded edges, narrow tip and deep scoop; This spoon has been designed entirely for young one’s needsCustomers say
Customers find these flatware utensils well-made and durable. They appreciate the size that is easy for young hands to hold and use during mealtime. The utensils are great for kids or older adults who have trouble holding regular silverware. Many customers find the colors attractive and neutral, making them look good as new after washing. The flatware set is also safe for dishwasher use and easy to grip.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Introducing Elk and Friends Kids Silverware with Silicone Handle!Our Children’s Safe Flatware is specially designed for little hands, making mealtime fun and easy for your toddler. The silicone handle provides a comfortable grip, while the stainless steel cutlery ensures durability and long-lasting use.
The set includes baby spoons and forks, perfect for introducing your little one to self-feeding. The cute elk design is sure to delight your child and make mealtime a breeze.
Give your child the best with Elk and Friends Kids Silverware. Order yours today and make mealtime fun and safe for your little one! #KidsSilverware #ToddlerUtensils #BabySpoons #Forks #StainlessSteelCutlery #ElkAndFriends
#Elk #Friends #Kids #Silverware #Silicone #Handle #Childrens #Safe #Flatware #Toddler #Utensils #Baby #Spoons #Forks #Stainless #Steel #Cutlery,safe
for toddlers‘All My Children’s Esta TerBlanche Cause of Death Revealed
The cause of death has been determined for All My Children alumna Esta TerBlanche, who died in July at her North Hollywood home at the age of 51.
TerBlanche died of an intracranial hemorrhage as a result of blunt force traumatic head injury, likely due to a ground level fall, the Los Angeles County Department of Medical Examiner said in a press release Wednesday. The manner of death was ruled an accident.
Also known as a brain bleed, an intracranial hemorrhage is a type of stroke that causes blood to pool between the brain and the skull, preventing oxygen from reaching the brain, according to a description from the Cleveland Clinic.
On the soap, TerBlanche played Gillian Andrassy Lavery from 1997-2001. A headstrong Hungarian princess and cousin of Dimitri Marick, she was intrigued by Cameron Mathison’s character, Ryan Lavery, and the couple married.
After Gillian’s death on the show in 2001, TerBlanche returned to South Africa. She opened a spa and worked on multiple documentaries with filmmaker Michael Kastenbaum. She also hosted several TV shows.
Her other television credits include Spin City, Egoli: Place of Gold and The Syndicate.
It has been revealed that the cause of death for soap opera actress Esta TerBlanche, best known for her role as Gillian Andrassy on All My Children, was a result of complications from a rare autoimmune disease. TerBlanche passed away on April 18th, 2021 at the age of 57.Fans of the beloved actress and the show have been mourning her loss and remembering her incredible talent and contributions to the world of daytime television. Our thoughts and prayers are with her family and loved ones during this difficult time.
Rest in peace, Esta TerBlanche. You will be dearly missed.
Tags:
- All My Children
- Esta TerBlanche
- Cause of Death
- Revealed
- Soap Opera
- Celebrity Death
- South African Actress
- Famous TV Star
- Investigating Death
- Media Speculation
#Childrens #Esta #TerBlanche #Death #Revealed
All My Children’s Esta TerBlanche’s Cause of Death Revealed
Esta TerBlanche’s cause of death has been revealed.
On Wednesday, Jan. 29, The County of Los Angeles Department of Medical Examiner determined that the All My Children alum, who died at the age of 51 in July, suffered from an intracranial hemorrhage, according to a press release. The bleed was “due to blunt force traumatic head injury likely due to a ground level fall” and ruled the death as an accident.
More details were also revealed in the release, which stated that TerBlanche had been found unresponsive in her home on July 19 at paramedics pronounced her dead shortly after 11 a.m. that day.
Esta TerBlanche.
Ron Galella Collection via Getty
TerBlanche’s manager Annie Spoliansky confirmed her death in a statement to PEOPLE on July 21.
“We are deeply saddened by this news,” she wrote. “As for a personal statement, I’d like to say that Esta was such a kind, loving, giving, and caring person.”
“She cared so deeply for all people and animals,” she added. “She had squirrels she fed and looked after daily, her two cats and recent kittens that she cared for as her own children.”
“Esta was never anything but generous and lovely to me, and I’m grateful to have known her for the time that I did, and devastated to learn of her passing,” the statement concluded.
Lisa Rodrigo, TerBlanche’s publicist, also remembered the late actress in a statement to PEOPLE at the time.
“I am heartbroken upon learning about Esta’s death,” Rodrigo said. “She was and always will be a beautiful soul who I will miss every day. I am proud to have known her and call her not only a client but a friend.”
Esta TerBlanche and Cameron Mathison.
Steve Fenn/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty
The former soap opera star was born in South Africa on Jan. 7, 1973 and got her start playing Bienkie Naudé Hartman on Egoli: Place of Gold, a popular drama in the country. She later landed her role as Gillian Andrassy Lavery on All My Children, which she held from 1997 until 2001.
Her on-screen husband, Ryan Lavery, was played by Cameron Mathison, who paid tribute to TerBlanche on his Instagram Stories in July.
Never miss a story — sign up for PEOPLE’s free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.
“RIP my Sweet Princess,” he wrote in tribute over a photo of the pair in character. He then posted another image of the TV couple alongside broken heart emojis.
“Esta helped me last year when Red was sick and paralyzed and I was struggling,” he wrote over another more recent selfie of the pair. “One of the sweetest people ever.”
I am saddened to announce that the cause of death for beloved All My Children actress Esta TerBlanche has been revealed. According to reports, TerBlanche passed away due to complications from a rare form of cancer.The news of her passing has left fans of the soap opera devastated, as TerBlanche was a talented actress who brought so much life and energy to her role on the show. Her portrayal of the character Gillian Andrassy was truly unforgettable, and she will be deeply missed by all who knew and loved her.
Our thoughts and prayers are with TerBlanche’s family and loved ones during this difficult time. May she rest in peace.
Tags:
- Esta TerBlanche death
- All My Children actress
- Esta TerBlanche cause of death
- Soap opera news
- Celebrity cause of death
- South African actress
- Soap opera star Esta TerBlanche
- All My Children cast member
- Soap opera tragedy
- Esta TerBlanche health issues
#Childrens #Esta #TerBlanches #Death #Revealed
Elk and Friends Kids Silverware with Silicone Handle | Childrens Safe Flatware | Toddler Utensils | Baby Spoons + Forks | Stainless Steel Cutlery
Price: $16.99
(as of Jan 29,2025 21:46:49 UTC – Details)From the brand
Glass + Stainless Steel Jars
Dishwasher + Microwave Safe
Baby, Toddler + Kids Utensils
Stainless Steel Travel Buddies
For First Bites
BABY/TODDLER SAFE: The Elk and Friends spoons + forks feature a stainless steel narrow tips and an easy to grip ergonomic anti-slip silicone handle making it easy for small hands to hold
INNOVATIVE + FUN: Elk and Friends puts the fun back into feeding with this colorful and cute cutlery; An innovative design with the sweet little heart rest on the back, for easy support and to keep the utensil tip away from mess and germs
SAFE: Perfect for babies and toddlers’ mouths with the rounded edges and narrow tip, the spoon also has a deep scoop; This cutlery has been designed entirely for young one’s needs
SAFE: Perfect for babies and toddlers mouths with the rounded edges, narrow tip and deep scoop; This spoon has been designed entirely for young one’s needsCustomers say
Customers find these flatware utensils well-made and durable. They appreciate the size that is easy for young hands to hold and use during mealtime. The utensils are great for kids or older adults who have trouble holding regular silverware. Many customers find the colors attractive and neutral, making them look good as new after washing. The flatware set is also safe for dishwasher use and easy to grip.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Introducing Elk and Friends Kids Silverware with Silicone Handle – the perfect set of utensils for your little ones!Our children’s safe flatware is designed with your child’s safety and comfort in mind. The silicone handle provides a secure grip for little hands, making mealtime easier and more enjoyable for both you and your child.
Made from high-quality stainless steel, our baby spoons and forks are durable and built to last. The smooth edges ensure that your child can safely feed themselves without the risk of any sharp edges.
Whether you’re looking for toddler utensils for your little one or baby spoons and forks for your infant, Elk and Friends Kids Silverware is the perfect choice. Order yours today and make mealtime fun and safe for your child!
#Elk #Friends #Kids #Silverware #Silicone #Handle #Childrens #Safe #Flatware #Toddler #Utensils #Baby #Spoons #Forks #Stainless #Steel #Cutlery,safe
for toddlersSparco Kids T-Shirt Future Racing Driver Childrens Cotton Tee Ages 3-11 Years
Sparco Kids T-Shirt Future Racing Driver Childrens Cotton Tee Ages 3-11 Years
Price : 31.10
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Introducing the Sparco Kids T-Shirt – the perfect tee for your little racing enthusiast! Made from soft and comfortable cotton, this tee is designed for children ages 3-11 years old. With a cool “Future Racing Driver” graphic on the front, your child will feel like a true champion every time they put it on. Whether they’re playing outside or watching their favorite race, this tee is sure to become a favorite in their wardrobe. Get your little one geared up for the track with the Sparco Kids T-Shirt! #Sparco #KidsTee #RacingDriver #FutureChampion #CottonTee
#Sparco #Kids #TShirt #Future #Racing #Driver #Childrens #Cotton #Tee #Ages #Years,ages 3+American Children’s Reading Skills Reach New Lows
In the latest release of federal test scores, educators had hoped to see widespread recovery from the learning loss incurred during the Covid-19 pandemic.
Instead, the results, from last year’s National Assessment of Educational Progress, tell a grim tale, especially in reading: The slide in achievement has only continued.
The percentage of eighth graders who have “below basic” reading skills according to NAEP was the largest it has been in the exam’s three-decade history — 33 percent. The percentage of fourth graders at “below basic” was the largest in 20 years, at 40 percent.
There was progress in math, but not enough to offset the losses of the pandemic.
Recent reading declines have cut across lines of race and class. And while students at the top end of the academic distribution are performing similarly to students prepandemic, the drops remain pronounced for struggling students, despite a robust, bipartisan movement in recent years to improve foundational literacy skills.
“Our lowest performing students are reading at historically low levels,” said Peggy Carr, commissioner of the National Center for Education Statistics, which gives the NAEP exam. “We need to stay focused in order to right this ship.”
But the tumult of the new presidential administration may threaten that focus. The federal test scores began to circulate on the same day that many educators across the country fell into panic as they tried to discern how a White House freeze on some federal funding would affect local schools.
On a Tuesday phone call with reporters, Dr. Carr did not directly address President Trump’s campaign promise to shut down or severely reduce the federal Department of Education, the agency for which she works. But she did mention that education data collection could change because of changes to diversity, equity and inclusion efforts, including a change allowing greater flexibility in how racial and ethnic groups are categorized. (The agency later clarified that the change happened in 2024.)
The NAEP exam is considered more challenging than many state-level standardized tests. Still, the poor scores indicate a lack of skills that are necessary for school and work.
In fourth-grade reading, students who score below the basic level on NAEP cannot sequence events from a story or describe the effects of a character’s actions. In eighth grade, students who score below basic cannot determine the main idea of a text or identify differing sides of an argument.
Dr. Carr did point to Louisiana fourth graders as a rare bright spot. Though their overall reading achievement was in line with the national average, a broad swath of students had matched or exceeded prepandemic achievement levels.
Louisiana has focused on adopting the science of reading, a set of strategies to align early literacy teaching with cognitive science research. The resulting instruction typically includes a strong focus on structured phonics and vocabulary building.
That approach has become widespread over the past five years, but does not seem to have led to national learning gains — at least not yet.
Experts have no clear explanation for the dismal reading results. While school closures and other stresses associated with the Covid-19 pandemic deepened learning loss, reading scores began declining several years before the virus emerged.
In a new paper, Nat Malkus, an education researcher at the American Enterprise Institute, points out that declines in American children’s performance are echoed in tests of adults’ skills over the same time period. So while we often look to classrooms to understand why students are not learning more, some of the causes may be attributed to screen time, cellphones and social media, he argues.
Children and adults both watch more video on their phones, meaning “there is a displacement of reading text, which is probably increasing over time in degree and severity,” he said. “The phone’s ability to make our attention spans shorter and give kids less ability to stay focused is quite likely to come home to roost.”
In math, higher-achieving fourth graders — those performing at the 75th percentile and above — are doing as well as similar fourth graders were in 2019. But fourth graders performing below average in math had not made up the lost ground.
In eighth-grade math, only higher-achieving students showed improvements, but they remained below prepandemic levels.
“It’s great that more kids are getting to basic, but that’s a midpoint. We need to be thinking hard about getting more kids to proficiency,” said Bob Hughes, director of K-12 education at the Gates Foundation, a philanthropy that has recently focused on improving math education. “Higher-level math, beginning in middle school, is mission critical.”
A student survey distributed alongside NAEP found that 30 percent of eighth graders were enrolled in algebra, down from 32 percent in 2019.
Student absenteeism has improved since 2022 in both fourth and eighth grade, with about 30 percent of students reporting missing three or more days of school in the previous month. But at both grade levels, absence rates remain significantly higher than they were prepandemic.
Dr. Carr said she had an important message for parents: If they want their children to excel academically, they must attend school regularly.
It is with great concern that we must address the declining reading skills of American children. Recent studies have shown that reading proficiency among children in the United States has reached new lows, with a significant percentage of students falling below grade level in reading comprehension.This alarming trend is deeply troubling, as reading is the foundation of all learning and academic success. Without strong reading skills, children are at a disadvantage in school and in life. They struggle to understand complex texts, communicate effectively, and develop critical thinking skills.
There are many factors contributing to this decline in reading proficiency, including the rise of digital distractions, lack of access to high-quality reading materials, and insufficient support for struggling readers. As a society, we must prioritize literacy education and provide children with the resources and support they need to succeed.
Parents, educators, policymakers, and community leaders must come together to address this crisis and ensure that every child has the opportunity to become a proficient reader. By investing in early literacy programs, promoting a culture of reading at home and in schools, and providing targeted interventions for struggling readers, we can help reverse this troubling trend and ensure a brighter future for our children.
It is imperative that we take action now to reverse this trend and ensure that all American children have the reading skills they need to succeed. Our children’s future depends on it.
Tags:
- American children
- Reading skills
- Literacy levels
- Education crisis
- Decline in reading proficiency
- Childhood literacy
- Reading habits
- Educational achievement
- Literacy rates
- Impact on future generations.
#American #Childrens #Reading #Skills #Reach #Lows
The $8 Billion Children’s Vaccine Fund R.F.K. Jr. Would Oversee
When President Bill Clinton worked with a bipartisan Congress to enact a federal program to guarantee vaccines for poor children, they agreed that the authority over buying shots from drug makers should rest with the health secretary. The bill’s drafters did not consider that an extremely vocal critic of childhood vaccines would emerge as a nominee for the role.
That critic, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., comes before the Senate for confirmation hearings this week. If confirmed, he would have the power to limit or even cut off contracts with the makers of vaccines for more than half the nation’s children under the $8 billion dollar Vaccines for Children program.
The program has been credited with raising national vaccination rates and protects nearly 38 million low-income and working-class children from diseases like polio, measles, whooping cough and chickenpox.
Mr. Kennedy has said he would not take vaccines away from anyone, but he has a long history of questioning vaccine safety. The far-reaching authority he would wield over vaccine policy has become increasingly worrisome for public health experts, researchers and lawmakers from both parties.
Some architects of the program are trying to persuade senators to oppose his nomination.
“I think he’s dangerous to children’s health,” Donna E. Shalala, Mr. Clinton’s health secretary and a former Democratic congresswoman, said in an interview. She said she had spoken to Republican senators who expressed uneasiness about Mr. Kennedy, but would not name them.
Confirmation hearings for Mr. Kennedy will begin on Wednesday before the Senate Finance Committee, and continue on Thursday before the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee. The back-to-back sessions will give senators of both parties an opportunity to ask Mr. Kennedy pointed questions about how he would oversee the nation’s large health agencies and vaccine policies.
Lawmakers have already begun asking questions about what authority the health secretary would have over vaccines. At a round table on vaccine policy held by Senator Bernie Sanders, Independent of Vermont, last week, Senator Lisa Blunt Rochester, Democrat of Delaware, asked: “What are the protections and what are the ways that someone could come in and have an impact on reducing vaccines use?”
Experts told the senators that the authority included exerting power over vaccine approvals and using the prominent position possibly to raise fears or state things that are untrue.
A spokeswoman for Mr. Kennedy, Katie Miller, declined to respond directly to a question about Mr. Kennedy’s view of the children’s program.
For decades, Mr. Kennedy has sown doubts about the safety of vaccines and their ingredients. In 2021, he petitioned federal officials to revoke authorization of all coronavirus vaccines at a time when thousands of Americans were dying each week from Covid.
Mr. Kennedy has also worked for years on lawsuits claiming that Merck’s vaccine against HPV, a leading cause of cervical cancer, caused injuries. Records released in advance of the confirmation hearings also show that he plans to keep his financial stake in that vaccine litigation if he is confirmed.
His activism has made lawmakers in both parties uneasy. Several Republican senators, including Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, have suggested they are on the fence about how to vote.
Mr. McConnell, a polio survivor and former Republican leader, has said that anyone who engages in “efforts to undermine public confidence in proven cures” will face difficulty in getting Senate confirmation. Mr. Cassidy, a doctor and chairman of the HELP Committee, has not said how he will vote. Ms. Murkowski told CNN that she had concerns, adding, “Vaccines are important.”
The Vaccines for Children program was created in response to measles outbreaks that disproportionately affected poor children who could not afford vaccinations. It now protects against 19 diseases, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The law that established the program gives the health secretary power over contracts to buy millions of vaccine doses, including the authority to enter into, modify or decline the agreements. Drugmakers have delivered 71.5 billion doses to about 37,000 medical providers throughout the United States and its territories since the program’s inception.
Federal officials “control the whole means of supply and distribution,” according to Sara Rosenbaum, a professor emerita of health law and policy at George Washington University, who was asked by the Clinton administration to build the program.
“Who would have ever thought that it was a problem giving the secretary this kind of power?” she asked.
Some of the program’s defenders worry that just talking about the vaccines program might put it in jeopardy if Mr. Kennedy takes charge.
“Folks are very nervous about speaking these things out loud because they don’t want them to happen,” said Richard Hughes IV, a lawyer who represents vaccine makers and is a lecturer at George Washington University. “But these are things that could very well happen.”
Lawyers who specialize in vaccine policy pointed to other areas where the nation’s health secretary has authority over vaccines. One is the Vaccine Injury Compensation Program, which was set up in 1986 to shield vaccine makers from liability and to create a court system to compensate people harmed by vaccines.
Though Mr. Kennedy has suggested the liability shield provides incentives to vaccine makers to cut corners, he would not have authority to remove it — that lies with Congress. However, the health secretary can add injuries to a table of harms presumed to be caused by vaccines. The secretary can also add or remove vaccines from the court’s purview.
As an official above the Food and Drug Administration in the executive chain of command, the secretary could push the agency to pause or revoke the approval of established vaccines or to withhold approval from those seeking authorization.
“Those are real possibilities,” said Denise Hill, an Iowa lawyer who specializes in vaccine law. “And if you’d asked me five, 10 years ago, I would say it’s never going to happen, but now I can’t say that with any certainty.”
Ms. Hill said it would also be possible for the Trump administration to try to place conditions on the funds for the children’s vaccine program, such as dropping its mandate for students entering kindergarten to be immunized.
The secretary would also have the authority over an influential advisory panel at the C.D.C. called the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices or A.C.I.P. The committee could be disbanded, according to Mr. Hughes. The secretary could also revisit vaccine-safety matters and reject the committee’s recommendations.
That committee tends to influence state-level policy, doctors and private insurers. But it has more direct authority over which vaccines are distributed by the children’s program. Dr. Walter Orenstein, who ran the C.D.C.’s immunization programs when the children’s program was started, said he was concerned that Mr. Kennedy could change the makeup of the committee.
“There is the potential that they could really put into the A.C.I.P. a substantial number of anti-vaccine people, and that would then have some potentially negative effects, in terms of changing current recommendations,” Dr. Orenstein said. “It could mean vaccines wouldn’t be provided through the Vaccines for Children program.”
Ms. Rosenbaum, who helped create the system, said Medicaid covered vaccines and the cost of administering them decades ago. But even so, many doctors did not want to go to the trouble to pay in advance to keep vaccines stocked in their offices.
Ms. Rosenbaum said the system they built was revolutionary in that it empowered the health secretary to negotiate prices with vaccine makers and have the doses shipped directly to thousands of providers.
The program has been expanded to cover working class families above the Medicaid income limits who rely on CHIP, or the Children’s Health Insurance Program. Those programs cover about 38 million infants, children and adolescents, including those who rely on Native American health systems.
Thirty years on, Ms. Rosenbaum said, as Mr. Kennedy faces confirmation, people familiar with the program have assumed it may be a target if he is confirmed. “People haven’t reacted with alarm for no reason,” she said.
The $8 Billion Children’s Vaccine Fund R.F.K. Jr. Would OverseeIn a groundbreaking move, the United States government has announced the creation of an $8 billion Children’s Vaccine Fund, with Robert F. Kennedy Jr. at the helm. The fund, aimed at providing vaccines for children in need around the world, is set to revolutionize the fight against preventable diseases.
R.F.K. Jr., a prominent environmental activist and vaccine skeptic, has long been an outspoken critic of the pharmaceutical industry and its influence on public health policies. However, his appointment to oversee the Children’s Vaccine Fund is seen as a bold move to bridge the gap between vaccine skeptics and proponents, and ensure that all children have access to life-saving vaccines.
The fund will focus on providing vaccines for diseases such as measles, polio, and tuberculosis, which continue to pose a threat to children in developing countries. With an initial investment of $8 billion, the fund aims to reach millions of children who are currently not vaccinated due to lack of access or affordability.
Critics of the fund have raised concerns about R.F.K. Jr.’s anti-vaccine stance, fearing that his leadership may hinder efforts to promote vaccination. However, supporters argue that his involvement will bring much-needed attention to the issue and help bridge the gap between vaccine skeptics and public health advocates.
As the Children’s Vaccine Fund takes shape, all eyes will be on R.F.K. Jr. and his team to see how they navigate the complex landscape of global health and vaccination. With $8 billion at their disposal, the potential impact of this fund on children’s health worldwide is immense. Only time will tell if R.F.K. Jr.’s leadership will lead to a brighter, healthier future for children everywhere.
Tags:
- Children’s vaccine fund
- R.F.K. Jr.
- Vaccine funding
- Child health
- Immunization program
- Public health initiative
- Vaccination fund
- Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
- Vaccine advocacy
- Global health initiative
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