October: Time to Focus on Protecting Children
No one wants to hurt a child. Yet each year since 1928 our
nation's leaders have felt it's important to stress how we can
unwittingly allow our children to be harmed in and around our
own homes.
Children are vulnerable. Pound for pound, they breathe more air,
drink more water and eat more food than adults. They play close
to the ground and put their hands in their mouths, increasing
their exposure to toxins in the environment.
Their small bodies are still developing, often making a child
less able than adults to metabolize, detoxify and excrete toxins
they consume from air pollution, drinking water, food,
secondhand smoke, or peeling paint.
National Child Health Day, October 3
In 1928, President Calvin Coolidge established May 1 as Child
Health Day. In 1959, Congress changed National Child Health Day
to the first Monday in October, where it remains. The American
Academy of Pediatrics established October as Child Health Month
in 1992.
Sixteen federal agencies observe October as Children's Health
Month.
In 1928, President Coolidge declared, "The protection and
development of the health of the children of today are
fundamental necessities to the future progress and welfare of
the nation."
Focusing on children's health today is as important as ever,
maybe more. Asthma is a growing threat to children. With new
chemicals introduced into the environment each year, children
face a widening array of environmental hazards that can have a
significant impact on their health and well-being.
A Great Month to Learn
The Children's Health Month (
http://www.childrenshealth.gov/index.html ) website provides
great ideas to help parents and teachers learn more about a
variety of child health topics: childhood illness prevention,
education and child care, limiting environmental hazards,
reducing risky behaviors, and safety.
For October, you'll find a daily calendar of ideas to protect
children, ranging from preventing mercury exposure at school to
protecting children from secondhand smoke and mold. Other days
will focus on the safe use of pesticides, how to prevent lead,
radon and carbon monoxide poisoning, and how to help children
breathe easier and reduce asthma attacks.
Walk and Bike to School Week
Children Health Month also includes International Walk and Bike
to School Week October 3 - 7 ( http://www.walktoschool-usa.org/
). Children walking and biking to school offers real benefits
for both the children and the environment. The week enhances
children's health, cuts down on auto carbon monoxide around
schools, and with parents involved, helps to create safer routes
for walking and cycling.
Everyone Can Help
Children's Health Month is a tool to impress on everyone -
health care professionals, teachers and parents - the importance
of protecting children's health. Maybe we can absorb enough
helpful ideas to last year round.
Because, let's face it, children need our protection every day,
every month.
Why not click on the Children's Health Month Calendar (
http://www.childrenshealth.gov/calendar.html ) and learn how to
protect a child today? Or better yet, print out the calendar and
check it all month long. Maybe give copies to friends.
After all, children are 100 percent of our future.