Wednesday, April 24, 2013

We will march on

All of us at the March of Dimes were deeply touched and concerned by the explosions at the Boston Marathon on Monday - our hearts and sympathy go out to the families of those who were affected. As March for Babies events approach, we want to assure our dedicated community that the safety of your family, friends, and coworkers is our top priority and we are working closely with local law enforcement to make sure your event is safe and secure.

In the wake of this tragedy, we recognized the need to enhance security at our upcoming March for Babies events and to communicate with the public about our plans. We have contacted local law enforcement and confirmed their commitment to ensuring safety at our event. We have also updated our own emergency preparedness plans and shared this with all staff across our organization. We will also have a moment of silence at our March for Babies events to show our solidarity with the Boston Marathon victims.

We are grateful to our volunteer leaders, corporate sponsors and walkers for supporting our decision to move forward with our planned events. We thank all of you for your perseverance and dedication as we move forward with our mission. Babies still need your help and we hope you will join us as we celebrate our wish for a healthier future for our nation’s children.

Vaccinations during pregnancy

Some infections can harm you and your baby during pregnancy. This is why vaccinations are so important. They help protect your body from infection, and you pass this protection to your baby during pregnancy. This helps keep your baby safe during the first few months of life until he gets his own vaccinations.
Vaccinations also protect you from getting a serious disease that could affect future pregnancies. You probably got vaccinations as a child, but they don’t all protect you for your whole life. Over time, some childhood vaccinations stop working, so you may need what’s called a booster shot as an adult. Plus, there may be new vaccines that weren’t available when you were young, like the flu vaccine, recommended each year, or the Tdap vaccine that is recommended during each pregnancy. Talk to your health care provider to make sure all your vaccinations are up to date.
Not all vaccinations are safe to get during pregnancy. Here’s a link to a chart to help you know when you can get certain vaccinations if you need them. It includes the latest recommendations from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and from the CDC. Talk to your health care provider about vaccinations you need before, during or after pregnancy.

Saturday, April 20, 2013

What do I need to bring?


What do I need to bring?

-Strollers (if needed) – this is a long walk for little ones but please no bikes or roller blades.

-Sunscreen – forecast calls for a sunny day.  Time to break out the sunscreen and sunglasses!

-Water – there will be water at the tent afterwards and along the walk path at checkpoints, but it is always a good idea to bring your own.

-Snacks – you will want to bring snacks especially if you have little ones.  We will have snacks provided after the walk but there won’t be any snacks passed out along the way.

-Cash/Check Donations and Sponsor Form – Please bring any cash and check donations to the Family Teams Tent either before or after the walk.  Please print off your Sponsor Form to ensure that the donations are posted to the correct team.  You MUST have your Sponsor Form in order to pick up your incentive t-shirt for those individuals that have raised over $200.

-Sneakers – you will want to wear sneakers for this event.  The walk route is 4 miles, so good comfortable shoes are a must!

***A few items you may want to consider before leaving your house in the morning***

Extra quarters if you park on the street, Band Aids for blisters & a camera

 

How do I get to the walk?

Please see attached Parking Info sheet.

 

What happens during the walk?

The walk begins promptly at 9:30am!  Be at the front of the line and enjoy the 4 mile walk along Martin Luther King Jr. Drive.

 

What happens if it rains? Toss an umbrella in the trunk of your car. March for Babies takes place rain or shine. If it rains and it would be dangerous to walk, the route will be shortened.

 

Are there checkpoints or snacks along the route? There is 1 checkpoint along the route that will provide rest, refreshments and information.  All will have water and some even have a snack.  The walk route will go out Martin Luther King Jr. Drive and return back on Martin Luther King Jr. Drive until you reach your starting point.  Please see below for approximate locations and mileage for each checkpoint and turnaround.

 

0.0                                      START – Museum steps

2.4                   Montgomery Drive (Checkpoint and Turnaround)

4.0                   FINISH – Museum steps

 

What time do I need to arrive? Registration begins at 7:30am. But if you did all of your fundraising online, come at least 45 minutes early to enjoy the stage program.

I received a last-minute donation. What should I do with the money? Please bring it with you to the walk or contact our office at 610-945-6050.

Can I bring my dog? March for Babies is held at the Philadelphia Art Museum and along Martin Luther King Jr. Drive. There are no pet restrictions, but please consider the breed of your pet and that babies and small children will be at March for Babies.

Can I bring my children in strollers? Please do. The March of Babies wouldn't be a celebration without children and strollers.

Are there activities for children? Yes.  We will have several characters walking around, but also at 10am our Kids Zone will officially open with crafts, face painting, and a moon bounce.

 

Family Teams Tent

Please head back to the Family Teams Tent (#7 on the Tent Map) when you pass the Finish Line.  Please be sure your team members know where the Family Teams Tent is in case you get separated.

 

Run for Babies 5K and 10K

Do not forget that before the start of the March for Babies, the 3rd Annual Run for Babies 5K and 10K will be starting at 8:00am in the same location.  If you or someone you know would like to register for the run please go to www.runforbabies.com and support the March of Dimes by running.  Runners will have time to run, cool off, and then walk with the team if they want.

 

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

11 days until March for Babies Day...

Hello Family Team Captains!


Just 11 days away from the 2012 March for Babies…

are you ready?



Marching On

All of us at the March of Dimes were deeply touched and concerned by the explosions at the Boston Marathon. Our prayers and sympathy go out to the victims and their families. As March for Babies approaches, we want you to know that the safety of your family is our top priority and we are working closely with local law enforcement to make sure your event is safe and secure. Babies still need your help and we hope you will join us as we celebrate our wish for a healthier future for our nation’s children.


Family Team Sponsorship Deadline- April 19th Family Team Sponsorship forms are due by this Friday, April 19, 2013. In case you didn't receive an answer the first time make a follow up ask! Your potential donor may need a little coaxing or reminding. Same with your donation emails… time to send a reminder email to prospective donors!!


Congratulations to all of the teams who have received sponsors so far:


SMPS Philly Team Preemie Power

Claudia’s Tagalongs

Emily Barr

Team William



Ideas to help you reach your team goal:


Recruit 5 more walkers to your family team

As you recruit those walkers ensure that you are encouraging them to fundraise online. Just sending one email to a few friends can result in $100 or more of donations.


In celebration of our 75th anniversary, implement a 7 day, $75 challenge

Ask that each of the walkers on your team raise a minimum of $75 over the next 7 days.

Remind them to make their own contribution if they haven’t already.


Last but certainly NOT LEAST we ask that everyone sends another round of donation solicitation emails

The #1 reason people do not give if they have been asked is because they forget.

Send a reminder email to any donor that has been asked but not given letting them know that you have 11 days until our MFB event and you only need $____ more to get to your goal. Ask for their support.


T-Shirt Contest

If you made your own Family Team t-shirt you can enter the March for Babies t-shirt contest! Please bring a spare shirt to the walk and deliver it to the family teams tent on March for Babies day for chance to win! Winners will be announced from stage at the March for Babies closing ceremony.


White Carnation Ceremony

We will have a special time to honor of the memory of the angel babies that are no longer with us. We would like to give each parent who has experienced a loss a white carnation to show our recognition of their memory and as a symbol of one of the many reasons why we walk and raise fund for the March of Dimes. Please let me know if you will be participating so that we can make sure we have enough flowers.


Well, I’m getting excited about March for Babies, what about you??!! I will be in and around the Family Teams Tent all morning and I would love to meet you and see your team, so please look for me! I look forward to seeing you all there! If you have been to March for Babies before, you know what a fun experience it is and for all of our brand new teams, you are in for a fun, meaningful day!


Thanks for joining us at the 2013 March for Babies and thank you for walking to save babies!

Tips & Strategies to Reach Your Fundraising Goal!


Looking for ways to boost your fundraising efforts? Not sure how to motivate your members to reach your team goal? Check out these tips and strategies to help you reach (and excced) your individual and team fundraising goals! And remember, every chance you interact with someone is an opportunity to promote your passion and dedication for stronger, healthier babies, and an excellent way to encourage someone to support our mission.
Maximize Your Contacts:
Utilize email signatures and badges to expand your network. Include fundraising badges in your email signature and use banners on your website, blog or Facebook page to promote your efforts to friends and families.

Update everyone on how close you are to your goal to encourage additional donations. Send emails and letters to those who already donated thanking them for their support and updating them on your fundraising efforts. Follow up with people who were interested in donating, but haven’t yet committed. Use benchmarks in updates and on social media, such as “I’m just three $10 donations from my goal!”

Encourage Donations Everywhere You Go:
Download the iPhone & Android App to take your fundraising with you. Tap your way to your best campaign by seeing up-to-the minute online donations, adding cash and check donations and getting the latest information on March for Babies all from your mobile device.

Accept credit cards, in addition to cash and checks, by utilizing the mobile March for Babies website, in order to give people more options to donate.

Keep Your Team Motivated:
Send updates to your team every week and include both the team’s progress and share stories from those with a connection to our mission, such as our National Ambassador’s Story. If your team is walking for a specific family, include a special message from the family.

Build team spirit by setting up a day to make signs and t-shirts for the day of walk. Arrange for a pre-March for Babies pizza party or outing. Go the extra mile and offer a party as a reward to the whole team if you collectively reach your goal.

Highlight members (fundraising leaders, those who received matching gifts, and/or members who reached a specific milestone in fundraising) through word of mouth, print and at your next team meeting. Create competition by awarding those who raise a certain amount of donations by a specific date with free coffee or homemade baked goods.

Remember, your efforts and the donations raised are helping babies, everywhere. Remind donors that by donating to your walk they are giving to those who are too young and too little to ask for it.

Now let’s hear from you:
What advice do you have for teams and individuals trying to reach their goals?

Keeping track of your child’s records


Whether your child has a medical condition, disability, receives services through the Early Intervention Program or Special Education, one of the best things you can do is to keep all of your child’s records well organized.

Why is this so important?
If your child is in the early intervention program for babies and toddlers or if he is receiving services through your local school system, you will find that you will amass an enormous amount of paperwork. Keeping it organized will help you tremendously when you need to find documents for IFSP or IEP meetings, visits with other doctors or specialists, and if you need to apply for other programs or services. It is very important that you keep all evaluations and test results so that future specialists can see the history of your child when he evaluates him. Having orderly records will also help you if you need to speak with an attorney in an attempt to try to obtain services you feel your child should rightfully receive.

How should you get organized?
My favorite way to do this is to get an old fashioned three ring binder and put each item in it in chronological order (date order). Put the oldest one on top and the newest one at the bottom (so it reads like a book). You are going to need more than one binder as your child grows, and each one can be labeled a different year (2013, 2014, etc.). This binder method will allow you or your child’s doctors to review your child’s history in a beginning-to-end format. It will also give you a “big picture” of your child, and help you put the details of all the different moving parts into one coherent whole.

What should you put in the binder?
Put everything that is related to your child’s health, disability and education in the binder. This would include:
• Medical records – beginning with your child’s birth (and even your pregnancy if it is applicable or if you have it)
• All evaluation reports
• Your child’s ISFPs and/or IEPs
• Report cards
• Educational test results (such as standardized tests)
• Your notes from meetings or phone calls with school personnel, doctors, or other individuals, with dates
• Notes from your child’s teacher
• Samples of your child’s work
• The business cards of all of your child’s doctors. You can either put them in plastic business card holders, or create a master list of all the doctors with their contact info.
• CDs or thumb drives of electronic information that is on your computer (always back up files!)
• A list of all the medications your child is taking, with the dosage, frequency and prescribing doctor.
Some experts say that it is also helpful to create a one page summary sheet, which is almost like a table of contents. It should list each document, the date the document was created or received, and a brief description of what it is (eg. “John’s neurological evaluation, 2009,” “IEP for 5th grade,” “notes from team meeting on January 12, 2011,” etc.). This will help you to locate valuable information when you need it quickly (such as right before a meeting or a visit to a new doctor). The more organized you are, the easier it will be to manage your child’s journey.
Some people don’t like the binder method. If you find this does not work for you, then you might find it easier to put all of the above items in a file cabinet (in file folders) in chronological order. Whichever method you choose, just be consistent and label your folders so that you can find things when you need them.

When should you stop keeping these files and records?
Besides needing these records for early intervention or school based services, you may need these records for the high school years and beyond graduation. For example, you may need these records in order for your child to qualify for accommodations for college based entrance exams, such as the SAT or ACT. You will also need these records to support a request for testing accommodations at college. Lastly, many of these records will be required to apply for government benefits, such as Supplemental Security Income (SSI). So, I suggest that you keep your file system going for as long as your child (or later as an adult) has special needs.

Where can you get more help with this?
I often recommend that parents go to the NICHCY website as they have a Sample Record-Keeping Worksheet as well as a description of all of the various kinds of info that you should include in your binder on page 15.
In addition to NICHCY, you can also go to Wrightslaw, an extensive website dedicated to helping parents navigate the maze of special education. They offer concrete advice on how to advocate for your child with special needs. They also have great articles on how to organize your child’s records.

Bottom line
If you begin your record keeping early, you will not be overwhelmed by the avalanche of papers that will undoubtedly come your way. But, if you did not have a method of record keeping before today, don’t worry. Simply start with today and you can go back and organize prior paperwork another time. Being organized will cut down on the stress that occurs when you feel like you are buried beneath a mountain of paper. You have enough to tend to with your child – it is helpful if the paperwork does not get in your way but rather helps you achieve your goals. Of course, the best part of all is that you will feel more confident and in control of your journey.

Let me know if this helps or if you have other suggestions. What has worked for you?
Have questions? Send them to AskUs@marchofdimes.com.

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

March of Dimes Funds New Preterm Birth Research

Five Scientists Aim to Make Strides in Predicting and Preventing Preterm Birth
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y., March 5, 2013 Five researchers from four states are investigating how genetics and infections interact to cause preterm birth as well as how proteins and hormones regulate a healthy pregnancy, all with the goal of giving more babies a healthy start in life, the March of Dimes announced today.
The researchers will study the role that fetal fibronectin, a protein, plays in triggering premature rupture of the membranes; and how progesterone, a hormone that has been shown to prevent preterm birth in some women, helps a healthy pregnancy.
Nearly half a million babies – one out of every nine – are born too soon each year in the United States. Preterm birth is a serious health problem that costs the nation $26 billion annually. It is the leading cause of neonatal death, and babies who survive an early birth have increased risks of lung disease, cerebral palsy and intellectual and developmental disabilities, problems that can affect their health throughout their lives.
In 2011, the US preterm birth rate dropped to 11.7, the lowest in a decade, but still above the March of Dimes goal of lowering the national rate to 9.6 percent. That goal can be achieved in part by applying known strategies to prevent preterm birth, such as smoking cessation programs, progesterone treatments, and reducing early elective deliveries, the March of Dimes says. But the organization also believes continued research is needed to yield new medical advances to meet the goal.
The grants are awarded for three years and brings the March of Dimes nine-year-old Prematurity Research Initiative (PRI) Grant program’s total grant to nearly $24 million. The PRI program is one of several March of Dimes grant programs available to researchers.
Jeffrey C. Murray, MD, at the University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine, identified possible genes involved in preterm birth with the support of a prior March of Dimes PRI grant. This year, funding for his work has been renewed to allow him to build on his past discoveries with the goal of improving health care providers’ ability to predict which women are at high risk of delivering their baby too soon.
Other new grant recipients are:
• Louis Ragolia, PhD, director of Biomedical Research, Winthrop University Hospital, Mineola New York, who is focusing on prostaglandins, specialized lipids that mediate inflammation and play an important role in triggering labor at term, to identify women at risk of infection-related preterm delivery and develop drug treatment to prevent it.
• Indira U. Mysorekar, PhD, Washington University School of Medicine; St. Louis, Missouri, who is working to identify how bacteria and other infection-causing microorganisms attack the placenta and contribute to preterm birth.
• Francesco J. DeMayo, PhD, Baylor College of Medicine, Texas, who is seeking to understand the role progesterone plays in suppressing contractions until term. The hormone has been shown to prevent premature delivery among about one-third of women with a singleton pregnancy.
• Ruth Ann Word, MD, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, is investigating the role of the protein fetal fibronectin in causing preterm premature rupture of the membranes (PPROM), which is associated with 30 to 40 percent of preterm deliveries in the U.S
In 2013, the March of Dimes celebrates its 75th Anniversary and its ongoing work to help babies get a healthy start in life. Early research led to the Salk and Sabin polio vaccines that all babies still receive. Other breakthroughs include new treatments for premature infants and children with birth defects. About 4 million babies are born each year in the United States, and all have benefitted the March of Dimes life saving research and education.
The March of Dimes is the leading nonprofit organization for pregnancy and baby health. With chapters nationwide and its premier event, March for Babies®, the March of Dimes works to improve the health of babies by preventing birth defects, premature birth and infant mortality. For the latest resources and information, visit marchofdimes.com or nacersano.org. Find us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter.
The 2013 March for Babies is sponsored nationally by the March of Dimes number one corporate supporter Kmart, Farmers Insurance Group, Macy’s, Cigna, Sanofi Pasteur, Famous Footwear, Actavis, Mission Pharmacal, and United Airlines.