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13 ways school closures hurt kids and parents | Orange County Breeze


For nearly a year, 6 million public school students have been locked out of their classrooms due to the COVID-19 pandemic. On March 7, 2020, the Elk Grove Unified School District was the first school district in California to shutter its doors. By March 13, 2020, Governor Newsom ordered that public schools would retain state funding even if they physically closed, and by March 16, 2020 millions more K-12 children were sent home from school.
Over the next thirteen days, Open Schools California will highlight 13 examples of how school closures hurt kids and parents, concluding with a statewide day of action on March 13, 2021. Below are 13 reasons why school closures hurt kids and parents: ....

United States , Elk Grove , Joe Biden , Centers For Disease , American Academy Of Pediatrics , Na Mckinsey Company , Child Protective Services , Fielding School Of Public Health , University Of Washington , Elk Grove Unified School District , Mckinsey Company , National Student Clearinghouse Research Center , Governor Newsom , Open Schools California , American Academy , Disease Control , Hospital Oakland , United Nations , Child Protective , Public Health , President Joe Biden , English Language Arts , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , ஓஹோ பிடென் , மையங்கள் க்கு நோய் , அமெரிக்கன் கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் குழந்தை மருத்துவம் ,

After nearly a year of Zoom school, Bay Area parents and doctors sound the alarm: 'A cry for help'


Failing grades. Rising depression. Bay Area children are suffering from shuttered schools
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Senan Dokken, 9, attends online classes. His father, Erik, a handyman, has had to turn down some jobs to be home with his son.Photos by Santiago Mejia / The ChronicleShow MoreShow Less
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Senan Dokken, 9, at home during his online drama class on Thursday, Feb. 11, 2021, in San Francisco, Calif. Dokken is in 4th grade in the city’s public school district. Schools continue to teach online, amid the coronavirus pandemic. Earlier in the week, an agreement was announced with the school district to reopen the city’s public schools. The agreement allows a return to classrooms once the city reaches red tier, the second most restrictive level of California’s reopening blueprint, if vaccinations against the coronavirus are made available to school staff. If the city progresses to the orange tier, a less restrictive category with “moderate” virus ....

United States , San Diego , San Francisco , Senan Dokken , Heather Hough , Bonnie Forbes Wittenstein , Shanti Gonzalez , Christine Kratt , Kaiser Richmond , Erik Dokken , California Teachers Association , Bay Area , Santiago Mejia , Hospital Oakland , Jeanne Noble , California Teachers , President Shanti Gonzalez , Policy Analysis , California Education , Asian American , Jill Tucker , Ruth Asawa School Of The Arts , Ucsf Benioff Childrens Hospital Oakland , Viola Buitoni , Oakland Education Association , San Francisco Chronicle ,

Updated spina bifida guidelines cover care across the entire lifespan


Updated spina bifida guidelines cover care across the entire lifespan
Globally, nearly 300,000 babies are born with neural tube defects including spina bifida (SB) each year. This openly available special issue of the
Journal of Pediatric Rehabilitation Medicine (
JPRM) provides 20 important evidence- and consensus-based updates to key sections of the 2018 Guidelines for the Care of People with Spina Bifida issued by the Spina Bifida Association (SBA). These reflect current recommendations for the care of patients with SB across the entire lifespan, from prenatal counseling to adult care.
As a result of research advancements and improved team-based patient care, approximately 80%-90% of children with SB now live to adulthood in the United States. The Guidelines were written with this idea in mind and present the best evidence for what care should be delivered, regardless of the model or types of practitioners available. ....

United States , Jonathan Castillo , Judy Thibadeau , Elainel Pico , Heidia Castillo , Brade Dicianno , Sara Struwe , Emily Henderson , Centers For Disease , Meyer Center , National Center On Birth Defects , University Of Washington School Medicine , Collaborative Care Network , Division Of Developmental Medicine , Spina Bifida Association , Department Of Pediatrics , Texas Children Hospital Baylor College Of Medicine , Pediatric Rehabilitation Medicine , Guest Editors Jonathan Castillo , Developmental Pediatrics , Texas Children , Baylor College , Guest Editor , Director Timothy John Brei , Developmental Medicine , Seattle Children ,