Children of color and from low-income families in Ohio and across the nation are not only exposed to more dangerous toxic chemicals including lead, tailpipe and other air pollution, plastics and pesticides; they also experience disproportionate harm to brain development compared to their white and higher income peers, according to a new report. Devon Payne-Sturges, associate professor of environmental health at the University of Maryland and the report s co-author, said five decades of data show poverty exacerbates the effect of pollution. "Studies have found that the combined experience, say, of exposure to lead in the environment and being from an impoverished community, or a low-income family actually worsened the negative cognitive impacts," Payne-Sturges reported. " .
For young people with serious behavioral health challenges, a new report showed Pennsylvania s congregate-care settings may be the best option. The report s authors surveyed 20 providers of congregate care, in facilities housing from about a dozen kids to almost 300. Jaclyn Kreshock, director of children s behavioral health services for the Pennsylvania Council of Children, Youth and Family Services and the report s co-author, said there is a growing movement to transition youth to more community-based and homelike settings. .
A few residents who live near a Shirley Terrace area home say they are concerned about the strange happenings at the house that include upsetting activities occurring at all hours of the night. The residents expressed their concern to members of Moundsville City Council during their regular meeting on Tuesday. The residents said the owner […]
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