Healthy World Healthy Child - CHEC Creating Healthy Environments For Children

National Children’s Study

Federal Legislation

ACTION ALERT!!!: Please print out, sign, and send this letter to Tom Harkin,  Chairman of the Subcommittee on Labor, Education, and Health and Human Services, to let him know you want to support essential funding for 2008 so the study can proceed.

 

You can also call him and let him know how important it is that this study continues!

(202) 224-3254 Phone
(202) 224-9369 Fax
(202) 224-4633 TDD

Or copy and paste the letter online:
http://harkin.senate.gov/contact/contact.cfm

JOIN US – Long-term funding for the Largest Study on Children's Health ever is not secured.

We need your help in showing support for 2008 funding of the National Children's Study.

The National Children's Study is a large longitudinal study intended to follow 100,000 births from pre-pregnancy and/or early pregnancy to adulthood (21 years of age). The Study will evaluate the effects of chemical, biological, physical and psychosocial factors on the health of children and young adults, as well as gene-environment interactions that may help identify individuals who are most susceptible to disease. The major outcomes that will be focused on in the Study include pregnancy outcomes, neurobehavioral development, psychiatric conditions, asthma, injuries, diabetes, obesity and physical development.

The National Children's Study should be a national priority if America wants to remain competitive fifty, or even fifteen years from now. Last year, an article in the New England Journal of Medicine predicted that obesity and diabetes would lead to reduced life expectancy for the first time since the Great Depression. Obese children become obese adults, suffer heart disease and stroke earlier, and burden our health care system. Poor health undermines our economy. Our nation already spends 17% of its gross domestic product on health care. Spiraling health care costs hurt taxpayers, hurt productivity and hurt competitiveness. In the 1940s, we faced a similar epidemic in adults. Heart disease and stroke were killing forty year olds. A study in Framingham, Massachusetts - the Study on which the National Children’s Study is modeled - paved the way for the prevention of heart disease, stroke, breast and colon cancers. Life expectancy has soared since then. Now we face a similar epidemic among our children, and the need for another study like the Framingham Heart Study.

By working with pregnant women and couples, the study will gather an unprecedented amount of data about how environmental factors alone, or interacting with genetic factors, affect childhood health. Examining a wide range of environmental factors – from air, water, and dust to what children eat and how often they see a doctor – the study will help develop prevention strategies and cures for a wide range of childhood diseases. By collecting data nationwide – before diseases arise – the study can test unproven theories and generate hypotheses that will inform spin-off studies for years to come. Simply put, this seminal effort will provide the foundation for children’s healthcare in the 21st Century.

The outcome of these efforts will provide the most complete data to date on the effects of early life exposures to multiple environmental factors, and will be key to understanding the toxicity of a number of environmental agents, life stages of susceptibility, and genetic factors that contribute to susceptibility.

The Study will provide a wealth of data to improve the health of the nation's children for years to come. Thank you for your support and taking action.

ACT NOW – send a letter to Congress to insist on continued funding in 2008:

Make sure you are a member and HCHW will add your name and voice to our efforts.

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