Title: Healthy and Ready to Learn:
1- Healthy and Ready to Learn
- Enrolling Children in Health Insurance
2011 National Smart Start Conference May 5,
2011
2- Agenda
- 1000 am 1015 am Welcome, ice-breaker
- 1015 am 1030 am Group activity
- 1030 am 1045 am Overview of North
Carolinas childrens health insurance programs
and resources to support enrollment of
young children Norma Marti, Public
Health Minority Outreach Consultant, NC Division
of Public Health - 1045 am 1050 am Video intermission
- 1050 am 1115 am Healthy and Ready to Learn
(HRL) initiative Ania Boer, Project Director
Laura Brewer, India Foy and Betty Macon, HRL
Local Community Coordinators, NC
Pediatric Society Foundation - 1115 am 1130 am Questions Answers
- Healthy students learn better!
3NCs Public Programs Providing Quality Health
Care for KidsHealth Check / NC Health Choice
Norma Martí, Public Health Consultant Healthy
Ready to Learn SMART Start Conference May 5,
2011 Greensboro, NC
Children and Youth Branch
4Overview
- NCs statistics you need to know
- Insured/Uninsured
- Diversity
- History of federal legislation
- Health Check/Medicaid
- NC Health Choice/S-CHIP and CHIPRA
- Overview of Health Check/NC Health Choice
- CLAS (Culturally Linguistically Appropriate
Standards) components to outreach
5Why is it important to promote child health
insurance and access to a medical home for
children?
- Parents struggle to address the health care needs
of their children. - Well Child Care / Immunizations
- Early Identification of Health Risks
- Treatment of Illnesses/Chronic Disease
- Behavioral-Mental Health
- Nutritional
- Dental/Vision/Hearing
- Access to health insurance and a medical home
plays a key role in children receiving the
community resources and services needed. - There is a societal impact that being uninsured
has on a childs ability to be healthy and ready
to learn. - Segments of population within our state are not
as connected to systems or dont see prevention
treatments as priority - New immigrants/refugees
- Disenfranchised populations
6Why is it important for children to be insured?
- Compared to insured children, uninsured children
are - 25 more likely to miss school
- 8X less likely to have a regular source of care
- 4X more likely to delay or avoid care when needed
- 5X more likely to seek care from an emergency
room - 7X more likely not to have prescriptions filled
- In addition
- 20 have untreated vision problems
- 1 in 5 parents of uninsured children keep their
kids from playing sports due to fear of injury - Research data compiled by the RWJF Covering Kids
Project.
7Census 2010http//2010.census.gov/2010census/data
/
8(No Transcript)
9NC Children in Immigrant Families Concentration
in Major Urban Areas
- Source Population Reference Bureau, analysis of
the 2008 ACS, PUMS Data PUMS data. - Children in Immigrant Families
- AN ACTION FOR CHILDREN NORTH CAROLINA
- EMERGING ISSUES REPORT
- February 2010
- www.ncchild.org
10NC Refugee Population Country of Origin
(SY08-09)
Source NC DHHS-Refugee Health Program
11What child health insurance programs does North
Carolina offer?
- North Carolina offers two health insurance
programs for children - Health Check (Medicaid for Children)
- N.C. Health Choice
- (Federal Name is CHIP)
- Both offer free or low cost health insurance for
children and teens. - The same application is used to determine
eligibility for both programs. - They are marketed together.
12Medicaid Historical Legislation
- US historical link
- http//www.kff.org/medicaid/medicaid_timeline.cfm
- NC historical link (1992 Medicaid for Children
renamed Health Check) - http//www.ncdhhs.gov/dma/pub/historyofmedicai
d.pdf
13S-CHIP CHIPRAhttp//www.statehealthfacts.org/pr
ofileind.jsp?sub53rgn35cat4
- In 1998, in addition to a states Medicaid
program, federal legislation created health
insurance program for children up to age 19,
known as the State Childrens Health Insurance
Program (SCHIP). The NC General Assembly named it
NC Health Choice and created appropriation to
cover children in families whose income is at or
below 200 of the Federal poverty level and do
not qualify for Medicaid. - In NC, the application is the same as states
Medicaid program. - In 2009, the act was reauthorized (CHIPRA)
funding states to continue CHIP and allowed for a
number of changes. In NC, the one change
implemented was to allow children with
lawful-permanent residency status to be able to
apply (previously they had a 5-year waiting
period).
14Why market the two programs together?
- Family doesnt know what program their children
will qualify for until they apply. - Children may cross over from Health Check to NC
Health Choice as they age. - Families may have children in different programs.
- As a familys income changes, their children may
go back and forth between programs.
200 (44,700) 100 (22,350) An
nual income for a family of 4
Poverty Level ()
NC Health Choice Income Guidelines
Health Check Income Guidelinesas of
April 1, 2011
0 1 6
18 Age (years)
15What are the benefits?
- Well-child Checkups
- Sick Visits
- Medicines
- Immunizations
- Vision Hearing Care
- Dental Care
- Lab Tests
- Counseling
- Medical Equip Supplies
- Hospital Care
- Therapies
- Surgery
Additional benefits may be available for children
with Special Health Care Needs. Call
1-800-737-3028 for more information.
16How can a family determine if their child is
likely to qualify?
Income guidelines (Valid 4/1/11)
Family Size Monthly Income Before Taxes
2 2,452
3 3,089
4 3,725
5 4,362
6 Add 637 for each additional family member.
Children from families who earn more may qualify
if they have child care, work-related or child
support expenses.
17In addition
- For both programs, a child must
- Be a N.C. resident
- Be under age 19 (21 in some cases)
- Be eligible based on family income
- Provide or apply for a Social Security number
- And, for children who are U.S. citizens, provide
documentation of citizenship and identity.
18And
- Be over age 6 and under age 19
- Be income ineligible for Health Check (Medicaid)
- Be uninsured on the day coverage starts (your
local Department of Social Services can give you
more information) - Have paid the N.C. Health Choice enrollment fee,
if required
For NC Health Choice, a child must
19Is a child of immigrant parents eligible?
- Yes, if the child is born in the USA and they
qualify based on the familys income and
residency status. - A social security number must be provided for the
child or proof that a social security number has
been requested. - Maybe, if the child was born abroad.
- It depends on the immigration status of the
child. Check with the local Department of Social
Services to find out. - Children (and pregnant women) who have Lawful
Permanent Resident immigration status (a variety
of Visas) now have no waiting period. Before
July 1, 2010 there had been a 5-year
disqualification from Medicaid for LPR. - Applicant must meet all the regular income and
residency requirements. - Note
- Parents DO NOT hurt their chances for
naturalization by applying for childrens health
insurance!
20How much does coverage cost?
- Health Check (Medicaid)
- No annual enrollment fee
- No co-pays
- N.C. Health Choice
- Annual enrollment fee depends on the
- familys income.
- Some families have NO annual enrollment fee
- Some families pay 50 per child or 100 for 2 or
more children - Co-pays are small depend on the familys
income. - Families who have NO annual enrollment fee also
have no co-pays except for a small prescription
drug co-pay. - Parents NEVER have a CO-PAY for
- check-ups
- shots
21How can a family obtain an application for
Health Check (Medicaid)/NC Health Choice?
- To get an application, families can
- Go online to www.NCHealthyStart.org.Visit the
FOR THE PUBLIC section and click on the Child
Health Insurance link - For help completing the application, families
can - Go to the local department of social services
(DSS). They can help the family fill out the
application accept it when it is completed.
22What if the family completes the application on
their own? Then what?
- Families can mail or take the completed
application to their local Department of Social
Services. Remind them to - Attach copies of wage stubs or proof of income
for the previous month. - For children who are U.S. Citizens, the DSS will
also need proof of their citizenship and
identity. The DSS can help families verify
citizenship and identity. However, it will help
speed the process if the family can bring a copy
of each childs - birth certificate
- social security card
- proof of identity (government issued photo ID or
school, medical or hospital record with name and
date of birth) - For immigrant children who are Lawful Permanent
Residents, the family should provide US
Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS)
documents that prove their status plus proof of
identity, state residency and social security
card. - Include a phone number where the DSS worker can
call if they have a question! - Social Services will notify the family by mail to
let them know if they qualify. This can take up
to 45 days. - If they qualify they will get an insurance card
and benefits booklet in the mail.
23Help families stay enrolled!
- Remind families that they must RE-ENROLL each
year! - A re-enrollment packet will arrive in the mail.
- Families must let their local Department of
Social Services know if they move!
24Community-Based Organizations Partners in
meeting CLAS
- With growing concerns about racial and ethnic
disparities in health and the need for health
care systems to accommodate increasingly diverse
patient populations, cultural competence has
become more and more a matter of national concern
and attention. https//www.thinkculturalhealth.or
g/
- Hispanics In PhilanthropyNC Latino Grantees
- http//www.hiponline.org/Home/FundersCollaborati
ve/Grantees/NorthCarolina.htm - National Council on Interpreting in Health Care
- http//www.ncihc.org/mc/page.do?sitePageId57768
orgIdncihc - National Center for Cultural Competence
http//www11.georgetown.edu/research/gucchd/nccc/i
ndex.html - NC Refugee Assistance Program
- http//www.ncdhhs.gov/dss/refugee/index.htm
25What Resources Are Available?
26For More Information
- A "Partnership Page" offers a one-stop-shop for
everything - folks need to help with child health insurance
outreach. - http//www.nchealthystart.org/outreach/Partnership
Page/index.htm - Provides links to
- Health Check / NC Health Choice Orientation PPT
- NC Healthy Start Foundation Online Catalog
- NC Healthy Start Foundation Online Order Form
- HC/NCHC Application in English
- HC/NCHC Application in Spanish
- List of Local DSS Addresses and Phone Numbers
- Directory of Health Check Coordinators
- Child Health Insurance Web Page (For the Public)
- Note Save this link on your desktop you will
have easy - access to everything needed!
27For more information
- For Questions About Health Check/NC Health Choice
Outreach - Norma Martí 919-707-5643 or Norma.Marti_at_dhhs.nc.
gov - For Questions About Ordering Materials
- NC Healthy Start Foundation
- 919-828-1819 or http//www.nchealthystart.org/cat
alog/index.htm
28- Public service announcement
- Health Check/NC Health Choice health insurance
for children
29- Healthy and Ready to Learn initiative
30- N.C. Healthy and Ready to Learn Initiative
-
- Funding through Childrens Health Insurance
Program Reauthorization Act (CHIPRA) - Original CHIP Federal legislation in 1997
- North Carolina legislature created NC Health
Choice for Children - Robert Wood Johnson Foundations Covering Kids
grants to states - NC moves NC Health Choice children under age 6
- into Medicaid in 2006
- Federal Reauthorization in 2009 (Outreach
Enrollment grants) - Vision for health care reform
- Implementation of the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act in North Carolina - Model of outreach efforts to reach uninsured
population - Best practices and lessons learned
31- N.C. Healthy and Ready to Learn Initiative
-
- School-targeted outreach and enrollment effort
to register all eligible and uninsured children
entering public kindergarten into Health Check or
NC Health Choice under auspices of the CHIPRA
grant. - Partnership of Physicians, School Nurses, SHACs,
State Agencies (DPI, DPH, DMA), Local Education
Agencies, and Community-based Organizations, HRL
Steering Committee has 40 members, supported by
the Office of Governor and the State
Superintendent. - Identifies uninsured kindergarten students
through the Kindergarten Health Assessment form - Year 1 Pilot outreach in 16 high-need counties
- Year 2 Statewide outreach, focus in 32 more
counties to include pre-K and K students
32Healthy Ready to Learn Initiative Child Health
Insurance Grantee Schools, Year 1 2
Includes Elkin City Mount Airy City
Includes Lexington City Thomasville City
Includes Weldon City Roanoke Rapids
Includes Asheboro City
Includes Mooresville City
Alleghany
Northampton
Camden
Gates
Ashe
Caswell
Stokes
Surry 11
Person
Rockingham 17
Warren
Currituck
Vance 10
Hertford
Pasquotank
Granville
Halifax 11
Watauga
Includes Asheville City
Perquimans
Wilkes 13
Yadkin
Chowan
Forsyth 42
Avery
Orange
Guilford 69
Alamance 21
Franklin
Bertie
Mitchell
Durham 29
Nash 17
Caldwell 16
Alexander
Davie
Edgecombe 5
Yancey
Madison
Iredell 21
Washington
Martin 5
Tyrrell
Wake
Pitt 20
Davidson 22
Dare
Burke 17
McDowell
Wilson 14
Randolph 23
Chatham
Catawba 25
Rowan 20
Harnett 12
Beaufort
Buncombe 26
Haywood
Johnston 22
Hyde
Greene
Swain
Lincoln
Cabarrus 24
Rutherford 1o
Lee 8
Graham
Henderson
Montgomery 5
Wayne 15
Cleveland 18
Gaston 29
Jackson
Stanly 16
Polk
Moore
Lenoir 8
Mecklenburg
Transylvania
Craven 15
Macon
Pamlico
Cherokee 7
Cumberland 48
Includes Hickory City Newton Conover City
Clay
Hoke
Anson 6
Jones
Union 29
Richmond 9
Duplin 8
Sampson 9
Carteret
Scotland 9
CONTACT Ania Boer, Project Director,
(ania_at_ncpeds.org, 919-839-1156) Laura Brewer
(laura_at_ncpeds.org, 910-865-5507) Cleveland,
Columbus, Cumberland, Davidson, Gaston, Randolph,
Robeson, Rutherford New Counties Brunswick,
Buncombe, New Hanover, Bladen, Scotland,
Richmond, Anson, Union, Cherokee,
Montgomery Betty Macon (betty_at_ncpeds.org,
252-822-3340) Edgecombe, Halifax, Harnett,
Lenoir, Pitt, Vance, Wayne, Wilson New
Counties Lee, Johnston, Nash, Craven, Martin,
Sampson, Duplin, Onslow, Durham India Foy
(india_at_ncpeds.org, 336-617-6628) New Counties
Burke, Caldwell, Catawba, Iredell, Rowan,
Cabarrus, Stanly, Alamance, Guilford, Rockingham,
Forsyth, Surry, Wilkes
Onslow 19
Includes Kannapolis City
Robeson 23
Bladen 7
Pender
Columbus 10
New Hanover 24
Includes Clinton City
Brunswick 9
Includes Whiteville City
-Year 1 278 schools (22 LEAs) -Year 2 567
schools (40 LEAs) Total of 845 schools in 48
counties (62 LEAs)
33Healthy Children Learn Better!
- More alert
- More focused on learning
- Miss less school
- Learn healthy behaviors to prevent the leading
causes of death in NC heart disease, stroke and
cancer - Source Robeson County SHAC presentation
34Kindergarten Health Assessment Form
35Kindergarten Health Assessment Form
36Kindergarten Health Assessment Form
- Form is often NOT filled out completely when it
arrives at schools - Frequently, parents do not fill their part due to
low literacy levels or not realizing it is their
responsibility - Important to fill out form completely so the
school staff has an entire record on child's
health - Back side- under Parent Complete- identifies
children who do not have health coverage
37- Healthy and Ready to Learn partners
- Steering Committee members
- Mary Jane Akerman, Wellness Coordinator,
Thomasville City Schools - LaTasha Bennett, Information and Communication
Specialist, NC Community Health Center
Association - Ania Boer, Laura H. Brewer, India Foy, Betty
Macon, NC Pediatric Society Foundation - Clementine Buford, President, School Nurse
Association of North Carolina - John Dervin, Policy Advisor, NC Office of
Governor - Nicole Dozier, Assistant Project Director, NC
Justice Center Health Access Coalition, - Marian Earls, MD, Past President, NC Pediatric
Society - Linda Faulkner, Program Consultant, Medicaid
Eligibility Unit, Division of Medical Assistance - Janice Freedman, Executive Director, Erica
Payton, NC Healthy Start Foundation - Jessica Gerdes, School Health Nurse Consultant,
NC Division of Public Health - Dan Gitterman, Senior Policy Advisor, NC Office
of the Governor - Gary Henry, Director, Carolina Institute for
Public Policy, University of North Carolina at
Chapel HIll - Mark Holmes, Senior Research Fellow, Cecil G.
Sheps Center for Health Services Research, UNC - Lynn Harvey, Child Nutrition Services Director,
NC Department of Public Instruction - Robin Lane, Pediatric, Nurse Practitioner,
Outstanding Kids Inc. - Jade Marcus, Research Fellow, Rebecca Zulli,
Project Manager, Carolina Institute for Public
Policy at UNC
38- Healthy and Ready to Learn Steering Committee
member list - continued - Danielle Matula, Norma Marti, NC DHHS/DPH
- Chris Minard, Allied Health Consultant, Division
of Public Instruction - Ben Money, Executive Director, NC Community
Health Center Association - Lena Murill-Chapman, President of Student
Services Division, NCAE - Katrilla Ragin, Health Check Consultant, Division
of Medical Assistance - McAllister Ross Myhra, Director of Operations,
John Rex Endowment - Kevin Ryan, MD, Chief of Women's Children's
Health Section, NC DHHS/Division of Public Health - Carolyn Sexton, NC DHHS/Division of Public Health
CCNC - Gary Skinner, Catholic Charities of the Diocese
of Raleigh - Steve Shore, Executive Director, NC Pediatric
Society - Carol Tant, Head of Children Youth Branch, NC
DHHS/Division of Public Health - Susan Vaudreuil, Health Check Coordinator, NC
Access Care - Tom Vitaglione, Senior Fellow Health and
Safety, Action for Children NC - Wendy Ward, Project Director, Exceptional
Childrens Assistance Center - Ann Ward, Local Partnerships Support Specialist,
Smart Start - Margaret Watts, John York, Field Staff
Supervisor, NC Division of Medical Assistance
39- School Nurses School Health Advisory Councils
(SHACs) - School nurses
- -Link to children and families
- -Integral component to identifying eligible and
uninsured children using the Kindergarten Health
Assessment form - SHACs
- -Assistance from local healthcare entities,
community and faith-based organizations that
interact with children and families
40Coordinated School Health Approach
HRL Project School Nurses and SHACs
41- Collaborative effort is a key!
- Collaborative effort between school nurses,
student support services staff and School Health
Advisory Council is a key to helping students
stay healthy and learn better - HRL School Partners
- Use existing communication channels and
partnerships to promote childrens health
insurance - Implement a few outreach ideas at school from a
menu of school outreach strategies developed - Link Healthy and Ready to Learn to existing
school community priorities
42- Head Start Collaboration
- Letter to local directors sent from the NC State
Head Start - Orientation Webinar
- Action Steps developed after conducting a survey
- Add HC/NC Health Choice to Health Services
Advisory Committee (HSAC) meetings agendas, - Invite the HRL Local Community Coordinator to
HSAC meetings - Provide a HC/NC Health Choice booth at
registration events during summer/year round
43- Pediatric Providers
- Orientation Webinar for Pediatric Providers
- Authority figure providers in pilot counties
asked to submit the prepared op-ed article to
local media - Collaboration to assure KHA forms are completed
- (it will reduce repeat visits for providers and
cost to parents) - Discuss importance of completion of Personal
Data with parents - Offer NCHC/HC as a resource for children's health
insurance
Dr. David Hill
44- Presentation to orient Catholic Charities Case
Managers about HRL initiative. - HRL Local Community Coordinators met with staff
locally - include in conversations with families and
community partners - use as a resource during parenting programs,
self-sufficiency trainings - offer as a resource in early childhood centers,
free clinics, Catholic elementary schools - post in bulletin boards, newsletters
45- Smart Start
-
- HRL orientation webinar for Smart Start
Executive Directors and staff (36 participated) - Action steps created for Smart Start staff to
assist with helping uninsured families enroll in
NC Health Check - Collaboration with Durham Partnership for
Children (as a model) - HRL and Smart Start collaborations already
initiated and ongoing in some counties
46- NC Parent Teacher Association (NC PTA)
- The NC PTA is already involved in child health
insurance outreach in some local areas - Article has been published in their statewide NC
Parent-Teacher Bulletin and emailed to 1,075
PTAs across the state reaching over 165,000
individuals - Articles have also been published in their
Parent Resource Handbook for PTA Presidents - There are links from the NC-PTA web site to CHI
web pages - Exhibiting the HRL and CHI program at the NC
PTAs Annual Parent Education Conference to be
held on May 14, 2011 in - Fayetteville, NC
47Examples of school-based child health insurance
(CHI) outreach strategies to implement at your
school
- Use existing health status assessments
- Send HC/NCHC envelope stuffer home with every
child, along with a response form to be returned
to the childs teacher (available from the
School Partnership link above). - Ask parents to indicate the childs current
insurance status on school forms. Have them sign
it, provide contact information, and ask if they
want to receive a HC/NCHC application form - Existing communication infrastructures
- Use school voice mail systems to communicate a
message to all parents or a targeted group of
parents like those whose children qualify for
F/RP School Meals, or who have newly enrolled
kindergarteners. - Home-schooled children may have a list serve that
can be utilized to reach that population of
students. -
48Examples of school-based child health insurance
(CHI) outreach strategies to implement at your
school
- School-produced materials and forms
- Use Parent/Student Handbooks as an opportunity to
educate about CHI. (Information has been scripted
for use in such a resource, see School
Partnership link). If the parent has to sign a
document that they reviewed in the Handbook, then
a check box could be added to the form for
parents to indicate if they would like further
information or to be contacted about CHI. - Ask about insurance status through School
Registration, Sports Physicals, and other forms
to promote CHI and follow up as appropriate.
Include where to turn for more information
www.NCHealthyStart.org or go to local department
of social services.
49For More Information
- A "School Partnership Page" offers a
one-stop-shop for everything you need to do for
child health insurance outreach - http//www.nchealthystart.org/outreach/SchoolPartn
ership/index.htm - Provides links to
- School-Based Child Health Insurance Outreach
"Menu of Strategies" - Tools to Support Implementation of the "Menu of
Strategies" - Health Check / NC Health Choice Orientation PPT
- NC Healthy Start Foundation Online Catalog
- NC Healthy Start Foundation Online Order Form
- HC/NCHC Application in English
- HC/NCHC Application in Spanish
- List of Local DSS Addresses Phone Numbers
- Directory of Regional Health Check Coordinators
- Child Health Insurance Web Page (For the Public)
- NC Pediatric Society Foundations Healthy Ready
to Learn Initiative Web Page -
- Note Save this link on your desktop you
will have easy access to everything needed!
50YOU can make a difference! 10 HRL Actions Steps
- Share information about the Healthy and Ready to
Learn and child health insurance programs, Health
Check/ NC Health Choice, with school staff and
all your SHAC members (This PowerPoint will be
posted at www.NCPedsFoundation.org under
Orientation). - Order free (English/Spanish) outreach materials,
i.e. fact sheets (D4, D4BR), envelope stuffers
(D3), applications (D6E, D6S) and poster (D5)
from www.NCHealthyStart.org, click on Order. For
other languages, check http//www.nchealthystart.
org/outreach/index.html.
- Make sure ALL information on the KHA form is
complete and follow up on families who dont fill
out their part. - 4. Hang a HC/NCHC poster so that families can see
it. -
51YOU can make a difference! HRL Actions Steps
- Have outreach materials on hand and distribute
them to families who mark no insurance on the
KHA form or dont mark anything after your
attempts. Please share a flier with income
guidelines (fact sheet or envelope stuffer), an
application, and the address of local DSS. - 6. Consider following up with families to see
if they need help enrolling and offer them
resources such as www.NCHealthyStart.org and
local DSS.
- 7. Build on existing infrastructure and implement
a few outreach ideas in your school system from
School-based child health insurance outreach
strategies. For example, share materials during
kindergarten registration events or parent
orientations, or place a simple message to
parents on your schools voice system. - If your school has a Pre-K program, please
reach out to families of 4-year old children. - 8. Please keep track of the number and race of
the families you assist. Every quarter, we will
ask for an approximate number of families you
have reached.
52YOU can make a difference! Actions Steps
- Call us if you need help with ordering materials,
scripting a message, need a cover letter to send
to families, or want us to mail you fliers with
DSS addresses by county. - Local Community Coordinators for HRL are
- Laura H. Brewer (south/west region, office in
Robeson County), laura_at_ncpeds.org, 910-865-5507,
and Betty Macon (north/east region, office in
Halifax County), betty_at_ncpeds.org, 252-822-3340,
and India Foy (central/western region, office in
Guilford County), india_at_ncpeds.org, - 336-617-6628.
-
- Visit www.NCPedsFoundation.org for outreach
tools and resources! - 10. Share your success stories with us!
53Healthy and Ready to Learn Initiative Local
Community Coordinators
Project Director Ania Boer, ME, MA 1100 Wake
Forest Road, Ste 200 Raleigh, NC 27604 919
839-1156 FAX 919-839-1158 ania_at_ncpeds.org
C Central Region India Foy, MPH Greensboro,
NC 336-617-6628 india_at_ncpeds.org
NE Northeast Region Betty Macon Roanoke Rapids,
NC. 252-822-3340 betty_at_ncpeds.org
C
NE
SW
S
S SW Southern Southwestern Region Laura H.
Brewer St. Pauls/ Lumberton 910-865-5507 laura_at_ncp
eds.org
December 2010
54- North Carolina Pediatric Society Foundation
- Healthy and Ready to Learn initiative team
- Steve Shore, MSW, Executive Director, NCPS-F
- Ania Boer, ME, MA, Project Director,
ania_at_ncpeds.org - Laura Brewer, Local Community Coordinator for
south/western region - (office in Robeson County), laura_at_ncpeds.org,
(910) 865-5507 - India Foy, MPH, Local Community Coordinator for
central/western region - (office in Guilford County), india_at_ncpeds.org,
(336) 617-6628 - Betty Macon, Local Community Coordinator for
northeastern region - (office in Halifax County), betty_at_ncpeds.org,
(252) 822-3340 - 1100 Wake Forest Road, Suite 150
- Raleigh, NC 27604
- Phone (919) 839-1156
- Fax (919) 839-1158
- www.NCPedsFoundation.org
55- Thank you for your support of the
- Healthy and Ready to Learn Initiative!
- QA