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New School Screening Requirement Sheds Light on Hidden Kids' Health ProblemAug. 20, 2007 Contact: Eileen Walsh, vice president and director of communications, (650) 736-2881; eileen.walsh@lpfch.org PALO ALTO – As thousands of local kids troop to kindergarten in the next few weeks, a quarter of them will start school with an untreated disease. Not asthma, not obesity: dental decay. Dental disease is the most prevalent health problem for children in California. Many children, particularly those from low-income families, live with untreated decay that affects their physical and emotional health, as well as their school attendance and academic performance. The California legislature recognized the pervasiveness of this issue and last year passed a law requiring that children have a dental check-up before May 31 of their first year in school. As the new requirement brings heightened attention to this hidden issue at the start of the school year, the Lucile Packard Foundation for Children's Health today released a report highlighting dental health conditions for children in San Mateo and Santa Clara counties, www.kidsdata.org/dentalbrief/. "Dental decay is a hidden and insidious disease that hits particularly hard among lower-income children," said David Alexander, MD, president and CEO of the foundation. "Yet dental problems are in large part preventable, and efforts to combat them must take place on a variety of levels, from state policy to parent education." According to The 2007 Checkup: Children's Dental Health in Santa Clara and San Mateo Counties:
The report describes local and state programs and initiatives currently under way, and also notes pending legislation. It offers a comprehensive list of regional dental health resources that, along with the full study, can be accessed free at the Foundation's website at www.kidsdata.org/dentalbrief/ The Lucile Packard Foundation for Children's Health is a public charity
devoted exclusively to the health and well-being of children. Through
its kidsdata.org website, the foundation tracks indicators of children's
health over time, and issues occasional in-depth reports on key issues,
such as dental health. ###
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