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March of Dimes

March of Dimes is a United States nonprofit organization that works to improve the health of mothers and babies.[1] The organization was founded by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1938, as the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, to combat polio. The name "March of Dimes" was coined by Eddie Cantor. After funding Jonas Salk's polio vaccine, the organization expanded its focus to the prevention of birth defects and infant mortality. In 2005, as preterm birth emerged as the leading cause of death for children worldwide,[2] research and prevention of premature birth became the organization's primary focus.[3]

March of Dimes
FormationJanuary 3, 1938; 85 years ago (1938-01-03)
FounderFranklin D. Roosevelt
HeadquartersArlington County, Virginia, U.S.
President
Dr. Elizabeth Cherot
Websitemarchofdimes.org
Formerly called
  • National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis (1938)
  • National Foundation (1958)
  • March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation (1976)

Organization edit

March of Dimes improves the health of mothers and babies through five programming areas: medical research, education of pregnant women, community programs, government advocacy, and support of pregnant women and mothers.[4] The organization provides women and families with educational resources on baby health, pregnancy, preconception and new motherhood, as well as supplying information and support to families in the NICU who are affected by prematurity, birth defects, or other infant health problems.[3]

The organization began in 1938 as the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis. In 1976 it became known as the March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation. In 2007, the formal name became the March of Dimes Foundation.[5]

Anti-polio efforts edit

 
FDR's personal secretary Missy LeHand with 30,000 letters containing ten-cent contributions to the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis that arrived at the White House the morning of January 28, 1938

The group was founded by President Franklin D. Roosevelt on January 3, 1938, as a response to U.S. epidemics of polio, a condition that can leave people with permanent physical disabilities. Roosevelt was himself diagnosed with polio in 1921, although his symptoms are postulated to be more consistent with Guillain–Barré syndrome – an autoimmune neuropathy which Roosevelt's doctors failed to consider as a diagnostic possibility.[6] The foundation was an alliance between scientists and volunteers, with volunteers raising money to support research and education efforts.[5]

The National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis was a reconstitution of the Georgia Warm Springs Foundation, which Roosevelt and his friend Basil O'Connor founded with other friends in 1927.[7] O'Connor became the foundation's president, a position he held for more than three decades. His first task was to create a network of local chapters that could raise money and deliver aid; more than 3,100 county chapters were established during his tenure.[5]

The name "March of Dimes" — a play on the contemporary radio and newsreel series, The March of Time — was coined by stage, screen and radio star Eddie Cantor.[8][9] He inspired a nationwide fundraising campaign in the week preceding President Roosevelt's birthday on January 30, 1938. Lapel pins were sold for ten cents (a dime) each; special features were produced by the motion picture studios and radio industry; and nightclubs and cabarets held dances and contributed a portion of the proceeds.[10] As Cantor himself stated, "The March of Dimes will enable all persons, even the children, to show our President that they are with him in this battle against this disease. Nearly everyone can send in a dime, or several dimes. However, it takes only ten dimes to make a dollar and if a million people send only one dime, the total will be $100,000." Cantor's appeal collected only few dimes and donations to begin with, just $17.50 had been sent in to the White House in two days. But what followed was a flood: by January 29, over 80,000 letters with dimes, quarters and dollars poured into the White House mailroom so that official correspondence to the President was buried in donation letters, with a final count of 2,680,000 dimes or $268,000 donated in what the press called "a silver tide which actually swamped the White House."[11] Roosevelt went on the air to express his thanks, saying:

During the past few days bags of mail have been coming, literally by the truck load, to the White House. Yesterday between forty and fifty thousand letters came to the mail room of the White House. Today an even greater number — how many I cannot tell you — for we can only estimate the actual count by counting the mail bags. In all the envelopes are dimes and quarters and even dollar bills — gifts from grown-ups and children — mostly from children who want to help other children get well. … It is glorious to have one's birthday associated with a work like this.

— Franklin D. Roosevelt in his birthday celebration broadcast January 30, 1938.[12]

Donald Anderson was the very first "poster child" to raise money for the March of Dimes. He was from Oregon and had been diagnosed with polio in 1943. Photos were taken of Donald in an almost paralyzed state. Another photo was taken seven months later to show how he had improved after receiving treatment funded by the foundation. His story was meant to show how regular, everyday Americans had helped Donald during his time in the polio ward by donating to the March of Dimes.[13]

The March of Dimes was the title used for the foundation's annual fundraising event that requested each child donate a dime. At the Christmas season, booths were set up in cities where the children could drop their dime in a slot. These were out on the street and sometimes not even overseen by anyone. Gradually the name became synonymous with that of the organization.[14]

"His genius was in generating large numbers of relatively small contributions for a cause," The New York Times wrote of O'Connor. "Over the years he collected and spent more than seven billion dimes — many of them from schoolchildren — with a half-billion dollars of it going to the war on polio."[7]

 

Publisher Gerard Piel credited O'Connor with a "unique social invention: a permanently self-sustaining source of funds for the support of research — the voluntary health organization." With a centralized administration, state and local chapters and a large corps of volunteers, the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis became the prototype for dozens of similar foundations.[7]

In 1945, a journalist named Elaine Whitelaw created the women's division for the March of Dimes. Her main reason for doing so was to empower women, as primary caregivers, to come together to support the foundation's cause. The division's very first event was a fashion show in the Waldorf Astoria in New York City, which was a great success and had a large turnout.[13]

Following the death of Franklin D. Roosevelt, there was an entirely new challenge to fighting polio: Hollywood studios decided that the March of Dimes would no longer be allowed to collect donations from movie theater audiences, taking away a great portion of the foundation's funding. The foundation realized that his connection to the people, and to polio, was what had made Roosevelt effective at raising funds. The foundation sought a new way to make people feel a connection to polio by reminding families that this disease cripples small children and that mothers, especially, should protect those children.[13] Because Franklin D. Roosevelt founded the March of Dimes, a redesign of the dime was chosen to honor him after his death.[8] The Roosevelt dime was issued in 1946, on what would have been the president's 64th birthday.

From 1938 through the approval of the Salk vaccine in 1955, the foundation spent $233 million on polio patient care, which led to more than 80 percent of U.S. polio patients' receiving significant foundation aid.[15]

Sabin vaccine and conflict with the March of Dimes edit

Around the same time, Albert Sabin (also with funding from the March of Dimes) developed a simpler version of the vaccine, which was based on an attenuated live version of the polio virus.[16][17] Both Salk's version and Sabin's version had potential safety concerns; Salk's vaccine had the risk of a virus which is not completely inactivated, while Sabin's vaccine had the risk of reversion to virulence.[18]

In 1955, a batch of Salk's vaccine made by Cutter Laboratories in California was inadequately inactivated and, as a result, 11 children died. After this incident, production methods were changed and no further incidents were reported. Sabin became highly critical of O'Connor and the March of Dimes, who he believed were biased towards Salk's vaccine and made statements inconsistent with the scientific research. In the meantime, trials of the vaccine based on Sabin's version were carried out in the Soviet Union with important contributions made by Mikhail Chumakov.[18][16][6]

In 1958, the Soviet Union organized industrial production of this vaccine and polio was largely eradicated in Eastern Europe and Japan. This success led to trials in the United States as well and the licensing of Sabin's vaccine in 1961, over the considerable opposition of the March of Dimes, which supported Salk's vaccine. Eventually, Sabin's vaccine superseded Salk's vaccine based on its advantages, which included a simpler (oral) administration and lifelong immunity.[18][16][6]

Gallery edit

Change of mission edit

 
March of Dimes polio poster (1957)

Following widespread use of the polio vaccine, the organization was faced with disbanding or steering its resources toward a new mission. Basil O'Connor, then the organization's president, directed his staff to identify strengths and weaknesses and reformulate its mission.[5] The National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis (NFIP) shortened its name to the National Foundation (NF) in 1958 and launched its "Expanded Program" against birth defects, arthritis, and virus diseases, seeking to become a "flexible force" in the field of public health.[19][20]

In the mid-1960s, the organization focused its efforts on prevention of birth defects and infant mortality, which became its mission.[19][20] At that time, the cause of birth defects was unknown; only the effects were visible. In 1976, the organization changed its name to the March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation.[5] Reducing the toll of premature birth was added as a mission objective in 2005.

Initiatives after polio edit

Rubella edit

Rubella, also called German measles, is associated with a disorder called congenital rubella syndrome, which can cause miscarriages and birth defects such as deafness, blindness and intellectual disability.[21] Vaccination is an effective preventive measure. On behalf of the March of Dimes, Virginia Apgar testified to the United States Senate in 1969 about the importance of federal funding of a rubella immunization program,[22] and the organization funded[clarification needed] a vaccine, which was licensed in the early 1970s.[23] In 2006, a statement published in Birth Defects Research Part A credited the "remarkable success of the immunization program to eliminate rubella is due to joint efforts by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, various state and local health departments, the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology, and the March of Dimes".[24]

Maternal and neonatal care edit

In 1976, the March of Dimes published a report titled Toward Improving the Outcome of Pregnancy (TIOP), and in 1993 they published Toward Improving the Outcome of Pregnancy: The 90s and Beyond (TIOP II).[25] TIOP "stratified maternal and neonatal care into 3 levels of complexity and recommended referral of high-risk patients to centers with the personnel and resources needed for their degree of risk and severity of illness."[25] TIOP was published when "resources for the most complex care were relatively scarce and concentrated in academic medical centers."[25] TIOP II updated care complexity designations from levels I, II and III to basic, specialty and subspecialty, and the criteria were expanded.[25]

In 2001, the March of Dimes introduced a family support program for those with babies in a neonatal intensive care unit (NICU).[26] The program seeks to educate NICU staff to communicate effectively with patients' families.[27][28] The March of Dimes hosted the Symposium on Quality Improvement to Prevent Prematurity in October 2009.[29][30][31] In December 2010, the March of Dimes released TIOP III, subtitled Enhancing Perinatal Health Through Quality, Safety, and Performance Initiatives.

Fetal alcohol syndrome edit

Fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) is categorized as a group of birth defects ranging from mental retardation to various growth and behavioral problems.[32] The March of Dimes has provided grant funding for FAS research,[33][34] and they supported the National Council on Alcoholism in its push for legislation to bring public attention to the dangers of alcohol use by pregnant women.[verification needed] This led to a 1989 law mandating a warning label about the risk of birth defects that alcoholic beverages still carry today.[35][verification needed][36]

Folic acid edit

The March of Dimes has campaigned for public education on folic acid,[37] a vitamin which can prevent neural tube defects such as spina bifida and anencephaly if mothers have enough of it in their body. The March of Dimes has funded polls on folic acid from The Gallup Organization.[38] Analysis of some of the results, said that women aged 18–24 years had the least awareness regarding folic acid consumption or knowledge about when it should be taken.[39] On the issue, the organization partnered with the Grain Foods Foundation, an industry group, in public education efforts.[40][41]

Prematurity campaign edit

Awareness about preterm birth, which is associated with a variety of negative health outcomes, is an organizational goal. According to an editorial in the May 2004 issue of the Journal of the National Medical Association, the original goals of the campaign were to raise awareness of the problem from 35 percent to at least 60 percent and to decrease the rate of premature births by at least 15 percent (from 11.9 percent to 10.1 percent).[42] In 2008, the Prematurity Campaign was extended by the Board of Trustees until 2020, and global targets were set for prematurity prevention.[43] In 2008, the March of Dimes started its annual Premature Birth Report Card, which grades the nation and each individual state on preterm birth rates.[44]

Newborn screening edit

March of Dimes states on its website that it supports mandated newborn screening of all babies in all states in the U.S. for at least 30 life-threatening conditions for which effective treatment and reliable testing are available to prevent catastrophic consequences to the child.[45][46]

In 2003, the March of Dimes began releasing an annual, state-by-state report card on each state's adoption of expanded newborn screening recommended by the American College of Medical Genetics. March of Dimes president Jennifer L. Howse, Ph.D. has stated that this program is intended to inform parents of the tests available in their state, enabling those with affected babies to pursue early treatment.[47]

According to a presentation at the 2005 annual meeting of the American Public Health Association, individual, state-based March of Dimes chapters work with governors, state legislators, health departments, health professionals, and parents to improve state newborn screening programs and to make comprehensive newborn screening programs available to every newborn throughout the country.[48]

In 2005, only 38 percent of infants were born in states that required screening for 21 or more of 29 core conditions recommended by the American College of Medical Genetics; but by 2009, all 50 states and the District of Columbia required screening for 21 or more of these treatable disorders.[49]

NICU Family Support

March of Dimes introduced the NICU Family Support[50] program in 2001 to provide information and comfort to families during the NICU hospitalization of their newborn and to contribute to NICU staff professional development. Today it operates in 68 hospitals in the United States to serve more than 50,000 families annually. In 2018, March of Dimes released the My NICU Baby app[51] that provides families with information while in the NICU and to help them transition home.

Global Report on Birth Defects edit

The March of Dimes published its Global Report on Birth Defects in 2006, which estimated birth defects' global burden.[52]

White paper on prematurity edit

In 2009, the March of Dimes partnered with the Department of Reproductive Health and Research of the World Health Organization (RHR/WHO) to publish a white paper on the global and regional toll of preterm birth worldwide. This report, which was the first attempt to identify the global scope of premature births and related infant deaths, found that an estimated 13 million infants worldwide are born premature each year and more than one million of them die in their first month of life. Further, premature births account for 9.6 percent of total births and for 28 percent of newborn deaths. The highest rates of premature birth are in Africa, followed by North America (Canada and the United States combined).[53]

March for Babies edit

Established in 1970, the March for Babies, previously called WalkAmerica,[54] is the largest fundraiser of the year for the March of Dimes, as well as the oldest nationwide charitable walking event.[55] In the decades since, many other organizations have used the walkathon format to help raise money.[56] Funds raised by the event support March of Dimes-sponsored research and other programs to prevent premature birth, birth defects and infant mortality.[57]

According to the March of Dimes, March for Babies is held in more than 900 communities across the nation. Every year, 1 million people—including 20,000 company teams, family teams and national sponsors—participate in the event, which has raised more than $1.8 billion since 1970.[58] The March of Dimes states that seventy-six cents of every dollar raised in March for Babies is spent on research and programs to help prevent premature birth, birth defects and infant mortality.[59]

The first person to walk for the March of Dimes was John Harrison Finger, a textile worker in High Point, North Carolina. In 1948, his daughter came home from school and asked for a donation for the polio fund. Finger replied that he did not have the money but that he would raise some. In what is thought to be the first walkathon in March of Dimes history, Finger walked 32 miles — round trip from High Point to Greensboro — and collected a total of $1,700 in a red wagon he pulled behind him. During his lifetime he walked more than 1,000 miles and raised $15,832 to benefit the charity. The March of Dimes formally created its nationwide WalkAmerica drive in 1971, and Finger was named "Mr. WalkAmerica" in 1983.[60][61]

Sounds of Pertussis edit

Once rare in the United States, cases of pertussis (whooping cough) are appearing across the country with greater frequency.[62] To address this issue, the March of Dimes and Sanofi Pasteur launched a national education campaign in 2010 called "Sounds of Pertussis" to raise awareness about the seriousness of pertussis and the need for adult vaccination to prevent infecting babies.[62][63] NASCAR driver Jeff Gordon is a national spokesperson for the campaign.[64] The campaign recently sponsored a song-writing contest called Sound Off About Pertussis, which was won by Maria Bennett with her original song, "Give Pertussis a Whooping."[65]

Healthy Babies are Worth the Wait edit

To combat the state's high prematurity levels, in 2007, the March of Dimes, the Johnson & Johnson Pediatric Institute, and the Kentucky Department for Public Health partnered with six Kentucky hospitals to launch "Healthy Babies Are Worth the Wait," a health promotion and prematurity prevention initiative intended to reduce the rate of preventable preterm births in targeted areas of Kentucky.[66][67] Kentucky was chosen as a pilot due to an elevated preterm birth rate greater than the national average that had been steadily increasing over the past few years, its predisposition to adjustable risk factors such as smoking and nutrition, and the commitment and dedication of community leaders. In 2007–2009, the trial programs saw a 6.5% reduction in preterm birth rates.[68] The success of the program in the State of Kentucky led to the development of similar initiatives in New Jersey, Texas, New York, Kansas, and Illinois with upcoming sites in Florida and California.[69]

The primary goal of Healthy Babies Are Worth the Wait is a 15 percent reduction in the rate of singleton (one baby) preterm births in these targeted areas[70] through increasing knowledge and education regarding factors that increase the risks of preterm birth, influencing change in health care settings and creating new advancements in preventing preterm and low-birth-weight births. Other strategic goals include improving access to prenatal services and lowering the rate of early elective deliveries done before 39 weeks gestation.[69]

The Healthy Babies are Worth the Wait initiative was developed based on five core concepts: Partnerships and collaborations, Provider initiatives, Patient support, Public engagement, and Progress measurement. The program encourages providers to educate patients on the risk factors and prevention methods for preterm births, inform women of childbearing age of the challenges of delivering prematurely, and distribute public information regarding the costs of prematurity on society ($26 million annually).[71]

Program initiatives and services include progesterone shots given to pregnant women with past histories of preterm births, encouraging folic acid usage and stress management during pregnancy, and developing strategies to eliminate cesarean deliveries and inductions before 39 week's gestation unless medically necessary. The program was implemented as a Best Practice in the Association of Maternal & Child Health Programs (AMCHP) in 2015.[72]

Perinatal Data Center edit

The March of Dimes Perinatal Data Center includes the PeriStats Web site, which provides free access to U.S., state, county, and city maternal and infant health data.[73]

Legislation supported edit

Notable staff edit

Virginia Apgar, M.D., the creator of the Apgar Score, joined the March of Dimes in 1959 and eventually served as vice president for medical affairs.[80]

Criticism and controversy edit

Animal rights organizations[which?] have raised concerns about March of Dimes-funded medical research involving animals.[81] The foundation states it supports the use of non-animal research alternatives wherever possible.[citation needed]

In his book Essentials of Sociology: A Down-to-Earth Approach, sociologist Professor James M. Henslin describes March of Dimes as a bureaucracy that has taken on a life of its own through a classic example of a process called goal displacement. Faced with redundancy after Jonas Salk discovered the polio vaccine, it adopted a new mission, "fighting birth defects", which was recently changed to a vaguer goal of "breakthrough for babies", rather than disbanding.[82][83]

Charity Navigator, an organization that attempts to quantify the effectiveness of charities, has given the organization a rating of two stars (out of four). This is a merged score that attributes both a Financial as well as Accountability & Transparency rating to a non-profit. As of Fiscal Year 2015, Charity Navigator gives a 60.18 out of 100 score for Financial and a 97.00 out of 100 for Accountability & Transparency.[84] This gives the March of Dimes a merged score of 71.76, leading to their two star status.

Another criticism has been that President Jennifer Howse's compensation is high. In 2011, the March of Dimes' tax filings reported it as $545,982,[85] and the organization's filings from 2014 reported her salary as $503,692,[86] about 25% higher than the median CEO salary for similarly sized charities.[87]

References edit

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External links edit

  • Official website
  • "At the President's Birthday Ball" (1942) by the Glenn Miller Orchestra (YouTube)
  • "Fund Raising for Roosevelt", unissued British Pathé newsreel footage, without sound, of the 1944 March of Dimes and the President's Birthday Ball; incorrectly identified as political campaign fundraising (YouTube)
  • America Salutes the President's Birthday 2017-05-10 at the Wayback Machine (March of Dimes fund appeals 1943–45) at the RadioGOLDINdex
  • FDR's Birthday at the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum

march, dimes, united, states, nonprofit, organization, that, works, improve, health, mothers, babies, organization, founded, president, franklin, roosevelt, 1938, national, foundation, infantile, paralysis, combat, polio, name, coined, eddie, cantor, after, fu. March of Dimes is a United States nonprofit organization that works to improve the health of mothers and babies 1 The organization was founded by President Franklin D Roosevelt in 1938 as the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis to combat polio The name March of Dimes was coined by Eddie Cantor After funding Jonas Salk s polio vaccine the organization expanded its focus to the prevention of birth defects and infant mortality In 2005 as preterm birth emerged as the leading cause of death for children worldwide 2 research and prevention of premature birth became the organization s primary focus 3 March of DimesFormationJanuary 3 1938 85 years ago 1938 01 03 FounderFranklin D RooseveltHeadquartersArlington County Virginia U S PresidentDr Elizabeth CherotWebsitemarchofdimes orgFormerly calledNational Foundation for Infantile Paralysis 1938 National Foundation 1958 March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation 1976 Contents 1 Organization 2 Anti polio efforts 2 1 Sabin vaccine and conflict with the March of Dimes 2 2 Gallery 3 Change of mission 4 Initiatives after polio 4 1 Rubella 4 2 Maternal and neonatal care 4 2 1 Fetal alcohol syndrome 4 2 2 Folic acid 4 2 3 Prematurity campaign 4 2 4 Newborn screening 4 3 Global Report on Birth Defects 4 4 White paper on prematurity 4 5 March for Babies 4 6 Sounds of Pertussis 4 7 Healthy Babies are Worth the Wait 4 8 Perinatal Data Center 5 Legislation supported 6 Notable staff 7 Criticism and controversy 8 References 9 External linksOrganization editMarch of Dimes improves the health of mothers and babies through five programming areas medical research education of pregnant women community programs government advocacy and support of pregnant women and mothers 4 The organization provides women and families with educational resources on baby health pregnancy preconception and new motherhood as well as supplying information and support to families in the NICU who are affected by prematurity birth defects or other infant health problems 3 The organization began in 1938 as the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis In 1976 it became known as the March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation In 2007 the formal name became the March of Dimes Foundation 5 For the unaffiliated Canadian charitable organizations see Ontario March of Dimes and March of Dimes Canada Anti polio efforts edit nbsp FDR s personal secretary Missy LeHand with 30 000 letters containing ten cent contributions to the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis that arrived at the White House the morning of January 28 1938The group was founded by President Franklin D Roosevelt on January 3 1938 as a response to U S epidemics of polio a condition that can leave people with permanent physical disabilities Roosevelt was himself diagnosed with polio in 1921 although his symptoms are postulated to be more consistent with Guillain Barre syndrome an autoimmune neuropathy which Roosevelt s doctors failed to consider as a diagnostic possibility 6 The foundation was an alliance between scientists and volunteers with volunteers raising money to support research and education efforts 5 The National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis was a reconstitution of the Georgia Warm Springs Foundation which Roosevelt and his friend Basil O Connor founded with other friends in 1927 7 O Connor became the foundation s president a position he held for more than three decades His first task was to create a network of local chapters that could raise money and deliver aid more than 3 100 county chapters were established during his tenure 5 The name March of Dimes a play on the contemporary radio and newsreel series The March of Time was coined by stage screen and radio star Eddie Cantor 8 9 He inspired a nationwide fundraising campaign in the week preceding President Roosevelt s birthday on January 30 1938 Lapel pins were sold for ten cents a dime each special features were produced by the motion picture studios and radio industry and nightclubs and cabarets held dances and contributed a portion of the proceeds 10 As Cantor himself stated The March of Dimes will enable all persons even the children to show our President that they are with him in this battle against this disease Nearly everyone can send in a dime or several dimes However it takes only ten dimes to make a dollar and if a million people send only one dime the total will be 100 000 Cantor s appeal collected only few dimes and donations to begin with just 17 50 had been sent in to the White House in two days But what followed was a flood by January 29 over 80 000 letters with dimes quarters and dollars poured into the White House mailroom so that official correspondence to the President was buried in donation letters with a final count of 2 680 000 dimes or 268 000 donated in what the press called a silver tide which actually swamped the White House 11 Roosevelt went on the air to express his thanks saying During the past few days bags of mail have been coming literally by the truck load to the White House Yesterday between forty and fifty thousand letters came to the mail room of the White House Today an even greater number how many I cannot tell you for we can only estimate the actual count by counting the mail bags In all the envelopes are dimes and quarters and even dollar bills gifts from grown ups and children mostly from children who want to help other children get well It is glorious to have one s birthday associated with a work like this Franklin D Roosevelt in his birthday celebration broadcast January 30 1938 12 Donald Anderson was the very first poster child to raise money for the March of Dimes He was from Oregon and had been diagnosed with polio in 1943 Photos were taken of Donald in an almost paralyzed state Another photo was taken seven months later to show how he had improved after receiving treatment funded by the foundation His story was meant to show how regular everyday Americans had helped Donald during his time in the polio ward by donating to the March of Dimes 13 The March of Dimes was the title used for the foundation s annual fundraising event that requested each child donate a dime At the Christmas season booths were set up in cities where the children could drop their dime in a slot These were out on the street and sometimes not even overseen by anyone Gradually the name became synonymous with that of the organization 14 His genius was in generating large numbers of relatively small contributions for a cause The New York Times wrote of O Connor Over the years he collected and spent more than seven billion dimes many of them from schoolchildren with a half billion dollars of it going to the war on polio 7 nbsp Publisher Gerard Piel credited O Connor with a unique social invention a permanently self sustaining source of funds for the support of research the voluntary health organization With a centralized administration state and local chapters and a large corps of volunteers the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis became the prototype for dozens of similar foundations 7 In 1945 a journalist named Elaine Whitelaw created the women s division for the March of Dimes Her main reason for doing so was to empower women as primary caregivers to come together to support the foundation s cause The division s very first event was a fashion show in the Waldorf Astoria in New York City which was a great success and had a large turnout 13 Following the death of Franklin D Roosevelt there was an entirely new challenge to fighting polio Hollywood studios decided that the March of Dimes would no longer be allowed to collect donations from movie theater audiences taking away a great portion of the foundation s funding The foundation realized that his connection to the people and to polio was what had made Roosevelt effective at raising funds The foundation sought a new way to make people feel a connection to polio by reminding families that this disease cripples small children and that mothers especially should protect those children 13 Because Franklin D Roosevelt founded the March of Dimes a redesign of the dime was chosen to honor him after his death 8 The Roosevelt dime was issued in 1946 on what would have been the president s 64th birthday From 1938 through the approval of the Salk vaccine in 1955 the foundation spent 233 million on polio patient care which led to more than 80 percent of U S polio patients receiving significant foundation aid 15 Sabin vaccine and conflict with the March of Dimes edit Around the same time Albert Sabin also with funding from the March of Dimes developed a simpler version of the vaccine which was based on an attenuated live version of the polio virus 16 17 Both Salk s version and Sabin s version had potential safety concerns Salk s vaccine had the risk of a virus which is not completely inactivated while Sabin s vaccine had the risk of reversion to virulence 18 In 1955 a batch of Salk s vaccine made by Cutter Laboratories in California was inadequately inactivated and as a result 11 children died After this incident production methods were changed and no further incidents were reported Sabin became highly critical of O Connor and the March of Dimes who he believed were biased towards Salk s vaccine and made statements inconsistent with the scientific research In the meantime trials of the vaccine based on Sabin s version were carried out in the Soviet Union with important contributions made by Mikhail Chumakov 18 16 6 In 1958 the Soviet Union organized industrial production of this vaccine and polio was largely eradicated in Eastern Europe and Japan This success led to trials in the United States as well and the licensing of Sabin s vaccine in 1961 over the considerable opposition of the March of Dimes which supported Salk s vaccine Eventually Sabin s vaccine superseded Salk s vaccine based on its advantages which included a simpler oral administration and lifelong immunity 18 16 6 Gallery edit nbsp FDR receives a 1 million check proceeds from the first President s Birthday Ball 1934 nbsp Eleanor Roosevelt with celebrities invited to Washington D C for the 1937 President s Birthday Ball nbsp FDR buys a certificate enrolling him as Founder No 1 of the new National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis 1938 nbsp Poster for the 1939 President s Birthday Ball nbsp Eleanor Roosevelt buys the first ticket for the 1940 President s Birthday Ball nbsp Glenn Miller recorded Irving Berlin s At the President s Birthday Ball 1942 nbsp FDR with Basil O Connor 1944 nbsp Eleanor Roosevelt with celebrities invited to Washington D C for the 1944 President s Birthday Ball nbsp Eleanor Roosevelt and Lucille Ball at the 1944 President s Birthday Ball nbsp 1944 President s Birthday Ball nbsp Eleanor Roosevelt with celebrities invited to Washington D C for the 1945 President s Birthday BallChange of mission edit nbsp March of Dimes polio poster 1957 Following widespread use of the polio vaccine the organization was faced with disbanding or steering its resources toward a new mission Basil O Connor then the organization s president directed his staff to identify strengths and weaknesses and reformulate its mission 5 The National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis NFIP shortened its name to the National Foundation NF in 1958 and launched its Expanded Program against birth defects arthritis and virus diseases seeking to become a flexible force in the field of public health 19 20 In the mid 1960s the organization focused its efforts on prevention of birth defects and infant mortality which became its mission 19 20 At that time the cause of birth defects was unknown only the effects were visible In 1976 the organization changed its name to the March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation 5 Reducing the toll of premature birth was added as a mission objective in 2005 Initiatives after polio editRubella edit Rubella also called German measles is associated with a disorder called congenital rubella syndrome which can cause miscarriages and birth defects such as deafness blindness and intellectual disability 21 Vaccination is an effective preventive measure On behalf of the March of Dimes Virginia Apgar testified to the United States Senate in 1969 about the importance of federal funding of a rubella immunization program 22 and the organization funded clarification needed a vaccine which was licensed in the early 1970s 23 In 2006 a statement published in Birth Defects Research Part A credited the remarkable success of the immunization program to eliminate rubella is due to joint efforts by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention various state and local health departments the American Academy of Pediatrics the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology and the March of Dimes 24 Maternal and neonatal care edit In 1976 the March of Dimes published a report titled Toward Improving the Outcome of Pregnancy TIOP and in 1993 they published Toward Improving the Outcome of Pregnancy The 90s and Beyond TIOP II 25 TIOP stratified maternal and neonatal care into 3 levels of complexity and recommended referral of high risk patients to centers with the personnel and resources needed for their degree of risk and severity of illness 25 TIOP was published when resources for the most complex care were relatively scarce and concentrated in academic medical centers 25 TIOP II updated care complexity designations from levels I II and III to basic specialty and subspecialty and the criteria were expanded 25 In 2001 the March of Dimes introduced a family support program for those with babies in a neonatal intensive care unit NICU 26 The program seeks to educate NICU staff to communicate effectively with patients families 27 28 The March of Dimes hosted the Symposium on Quality Improvement to Prevent Prematurity in October 2009 29 30 31 In December 2010 the March of Dimes released TIOP III subtitled Enhancing Perinatal Health Through Quality Safety and Performance Initiatives Fetal alcohol syndrome edit Fetal alcohol syndrome FAS is categorized as a group of birth defects ranging from mental retardation to various growth and behavioral problems 32 The March of Dimes has provided grant funding for FAS research 33 34 and they supported the National Council on Alcoholism in its push for legislation to bring public attention to the dangers of alcohol use by pregnant women verification needed This led to a 1989 law mandating a warning label about the risk of birth defects that alcoholic beverages still carry today 35 verification needed 36 Folic acid edit The March of Dimes has campaigned for public education on folic acid 37 a vitamin which can prevent neural tube defects such as spina bifida and anencephaly if mothers have enough of it in their body The March of Dimes has funded polls on folic acid from The Gallup Organization 38 Analysis of some of the results said that women aged 18 24 years had the least awareness regarding folic acid consumption or knowledge about when it should be taken 39 On the issue the organization partnered with the Grain Foods Foundation an industry group in public education efforts 40 41 Prematurity campaign edit Awareness about preterm birth which is associated with a variety of negative health outcomes is an organizational goal According to an editorial in the May 2004 issue of the Journal of the National Medical Association the original goals of the campaign were to raise awareness of the problem from 35 percent to at least 60 percent and to decrease the rate of premature births by at least 15 percent from 11 9 percent to 10 1 percent 42 In 2008 the Prematurity Campaign was extended by the Board of Trustees until 2020 and global targets were set for prematurity prevention 43 In 2008 the March of Dimes started its annual Premature Birth Report Card which grades the nation and each individual state on preterm birth rates 44 Newborn screening edit March of Dimes states on its website that it supports mandated newborn screening of all babies in all states in the U S for at least 30 life threatening conditions for which effective treatment and reliable testing are available to prevent catastrophic consequences to the child 45 46 In 2003 the March of Dimes began releasing an annual state by state report card on each state s adoption of expanded newborn screening recommended by the American College of Medical Genetics March of Dimes president Jennifer L Howse Ph D has stated that this program is intended to inform parents of the tests available in their state enabling those with affected babies to pursue early treatment 47 According to a presentation at the 2005 annual meeting of the American Public Health Association individual state based March of Dimes chapters work with governors state legislators health departments health professionals and parents to improve state newborn screening programs and to make comprehensive newborn screening programs available to every newborn throughout the country 48 In 2005 only 38 percent of infants were born in states that required screening for 21 or more of 29 core conditions recommended by the American College of Medical Genetics but by 2009 all 50 states and the District of Columbia required screening for 21 or more of these treatable disorders 49 NICU Family SupportMarch of Dimes introduced the NICU Family Support 50 program in 2001 to provide information and comfort to families during the NICU hospitalization of their newborn and to contribute to NICU staff professional development Today it operates in 68 hospitals in the United States to serve more than 50 000 families annually In 2018 March of Dimes released the My NICU Baby app 51 that provides families with information while in the NICU and to help them transition home Global Report on Birth Defects edit The March of Dimes published its Global Report on Birth Defects in 2006 which estimated birth defects global burden 52 White paper on prematurity edit In 2009 the March of Dimes partnered with the Department of Reproductive Health and Research of the World Health Organization RHR WHO to publish a white paper on the global and regional toll of preterm birth worldwide This report which was the first attempt to identify the global scope of premature births and related infant deaths found that an estimated 13 million infants worldwide are born premature each year and more than one million of them die in their first month of life Further premature births account for 9 6 percent of total births and for 28 percent of newborn deaths The highest rates of premature birth are in Africa followed by North America Canada and the United States combined 53 March for Babies edit Main article March for Babies Established in 1970 the March for Babies previously called WalkAmerica 54 is the largest fundraiser of the year for the March of Dimes as well as the oldest nationwide charitable walking event 55 In the decades since many other organizations have used the walkathon format to help raise money 56 Funds raised by the event support March of Dimes sponsored research and other programs to prevent premature birth birth defects and infant mortality 57 According to the March of Dimes March for Babies is held in more than 900 communities across the nation Every year 1 million people including 20 000 company teams family teams and national sponsors participate in the event which has raised more than 1 8 billion since 1970 58 The March of Dimes states that seventy six cents of every dollar raised in March for Babies is spent on research and programs to help prevent premature birth birth defects and infant mortality 59 The first person to walk for the March of Dimes was John Harrison Finger a textile worker in High Point North Carolina In 1948 his daughter came home from school and asked for a donation for the polio fund Finger replied that he did not have the money but that he would raise some In what is thought to be the first walkathon in March of Dimes history Finger walked 32 miles round trip from High Point to Greensboro and collected a total of 1 700 in a red wagon he pulled behind him During his lifetime he walked more than 1 000 miles and raised 15 832 to benefit the charity The March of Dimes formally created its nationwide WalkAmerica drive in 1971 and Finger was named Mr WalkAmerica in 1983 60 61 Sounds of Pertussis edit Once rare in the United States cases of pertussis whooping cough are appearing across the country with greater frequency 62 To address this issue the March of Dimes and Sanofi Pasteur launched a national education campaign in 2010 called Sounds of Pertussis to raise awareness about the seriousness of pertussis and the need for adult vaccination to prevent infecting babies 62 63 NASCAR driver Jeff Gordon is a national spokesperson for the campaign 64 The campaign recently sponsored a song writing contest called Sound Off About Pertussis which was won by Maria Bennett with her original song Give Pertussis a Whooping 65 Healthy Babies are Worth the Wait edit To combat the state s high prematurity levels in 2007 the March of Dimes the Johnson amp Johnson Pediatric Institute and the Kentucky Department for Public Health partnered with six Kentucky hospitals to launch Healthy Babies Are Worth the Wait a health promotion and prematurity prevention initiative intended to reduce the rate of preventable preterm births in targeted areas of Kentucky 66 67 Kentucky was chosen as a pilot due to an elevated preterm birth rate greater than the national average that had been steadily increasing over the past few years its predisposition to adjustable risk factors such as smoking and nutrition and the commitment and dedication of community leaders In 2007 2009 the trial programs saw a 6 5 reduction in preterm birth rates 68 The success of the program in the State of Kentucky led to the development of similar initiatives in New Jersey Texas New York Kansas and Illinois with upcoming sites in Florida and California 69 The primary goal of Healthy Babies Are Worth the Wait is a 15 percent reduction in the rate of singleton one baby preterm births in these targeted areas 70 through increasing knowledge and education regarding factors that increase the risks of preterm birth influencing change in health care settings and creating new advancements in preventing preterm and low birth weight births Other strategic goals include improving access to prenatal services and lowering the rate of early elective deliveries done before 39 weeks gestation 69 The Healthy Babies are Worth the Wait initiative was developed based on five core concepts Partnerships and collaborations Provider initiatives Patient support Public engagement and Progress measurement The program encourages providers to educate patients on the risk factors and prevention methods for preterm births inform women of childbearing age of the challenges of delivering prematurely and distribute public information regarding the costs of prematurity on society 26 million annually 71 Program initiatives and services include progesterone shots given to pregnant women with past histories of preterm births encouraging folic acid usage and stress management during pregnancy and developing strategies to eliminate cesarean deliveries and inductions before 39 week s gestation unless medically necessary The program was implemented as a Best Practice in the Association of Maternal amp Child Health Programs AMCHP in 2015 72 Perinatal Data Center edit The March of Dimes Perinatal Data Center includes the PeriStats Web site which provides free access to U S state county and city maternal and infant health data 73 Legislation supported editPREEMIE Reauthorization Act S 252 113th Congress a bill that would reauthorize research by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention related to preterm birth and take other actions to improve infant mortality rates 74 Newborn Screening Saves Lives Reauthorization Act of 2013 H R 1281 113th Congress a bill that would amend the Public Health Service Act to reauthorize grant programs and other initiatives to promote expanded screening of newborns and children for heritable disorders 75 76 The March of Dimes described the bill as reauthorizing critical federal activities that assist states in improving and expanding their newborn screening programs supporting parents and provider newborns screening education and ensuring laboratory quality and surveillance 76 State Children s Health Insurance Program reauthorization a bill that supported the continuation of the State Children s Health Insurance Program SCHIP a program that provides health insurance to 11 million low income children and pregnant women In 2007 and 2009 March of Dimes partnered with the American Academy of Pediatrics AAP and the National Association of Children s Hospitals NACH on the issue 77 78 79 Notable staff editVirginia Apgar M D the creator of the Apgar Score joined the March of Dimes in 1959 and eventually served as vice president for medical affairs 80 Criticism and controversy editAnimal rights organizations which have raised concerns about March of Dimes funded medical research involving animals 81 The foundation states it supports the use of non animal research alternatives wherever possible citation needed In his book Essentials of Sociology A Down to Earth Approach sociologist Professor James M Henslin describes March of Dimes as a bureaucracy that has taken on a life of its own through a classic example of a process called goal displacement Faced with redundancy after Jonas Salk discovered the polio vaccine it adopted a new mission fighting birth defects which was recently changed to a vaguer goal of breakthrough for babies rather than disbanding 82 83 Charity Navigator an organization that attempts to quantify the effectiveness of charities has given the organization a rating of two stars out of four This is a merged score that attributes both a Financial as well as Accountability amp Transparency rating to a non profit As of Fiscal Year 2015 Charity Navigator gives a 60 18 out of 100 score for Financial and a 97 00 out of 100 for Accountability amp Transparency 84 This gives the March of Dimes a merged score of 71 76 leading to their two star status Another criticism has been that President Jennifer Howse s compensation is high In 2011 the March of Dimes tax filings reported it as 545 982 85 and the organization s filings from 2014 reported her salary as 503 692 86 about 25 higher than the median CEO salary for similarly sized charities 87 References edit About Us March of Dimes Retrieved May 2 2017 Preterm Birth World Health Organization Retrieved May 2 2017 a b Baby Talk March of Dimes Rebrands Adweek Retrieved November 11 2010 2015 Annual Report PDF March of Dimes Foundation Archived from the original PDF on August 3 2016 Retrieved May 2 2017 a b c d e Baghdady Maddock J Spring 2008 Marching to a Different Mission PDF Stanford Social Innovation Review 60 65 Retrieved November 11 2010 a b c Goldman Armond S Goldman Daniel A 2017 Prisoners of Time The Misdiagnosis of FDR s 1921 Illness EHDP Press ISBN 978 1939824035 a b c Whitman Alden March 10 1972 Basil O Connor Polio Crusader Dies The New York Times Retrieved 2015 09 25 a b Barrett William P Barrett Nov 19 2008 March Of Dimes Second Act Forbes Retrieved 27 April 2021 Maranzani Barbara January 3 2013 Franklin Roosevelt s Personal Polio Crusade 75 Years Ago History com Retrieved 2015 10 02 Three Home From Paralysis Session The Bakersfield Californian January 5 1938 Star Cast to Take Air Tonight in Behalf of March of Dimes Drive Abilene Reporter News January 22 1939 Roosevelt Franlin D January 30 1938 The President s Birthday Message Disability History Museum National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis Retrieved 2015 03 09 a b c Oshinsky David M 2005 Polio an American story Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 515294 8 OCLC 56834404 Helfand William H 2001 So that others may walk So be good The March of Dimes American Journal of Public Health 91 8 1190 doi 10 2105 ajph 91 8 1190 PMC 1446742 PMID 11499100 Oshinsky David 2005 Polio an American Story Oxford University Press pp 65 ISBN 0 19 515294 8 a b c Matysiak Angela 2005 The Myth of Jonas Salk MIT Technology Review MIT Larsen Dawn 2012 The March of Dimes and Polio American Journal of Health Education 43 1 47 54 doi 10 1080 19325037 2012 10599217 ISSN 1932 5037 S2CID 72084666 a b c Nockels Fabbri Christiane November 30 2016 From Anesthesia to X Rays Innovations and Discoveries That Changed Medicine Forever Innovations That Changed Medicine Forever ABC CLIO pp 150 152 ISBN 978 1 61069 574 9 a b Katz Michael A Genetic Pioneer Focused On Child Health Challenges Nature Neuroscience 9 10 Oct 2006 PsycINFO Web 21 Dec 2011 a b Bustos Joseph Volunteers march on The Daily Gazette Sterling IL 07 Apr 2008 Newspaper Source Plus Web 21 Dec 2011 Siegel M Fuerst HT Guinee VF 1971 Rubella epidemicity and embryopath Results of a long term prospective study American Journal of Diseases of Children 121 6 469 73 doi 10 1001 archpedi 1971 02100170051003 PMID 5581012 The Virginia Apgar Papers National Library of Medicine Profiles in Science website Retrieved October 11 2010 And Down Will Come Baby Orange Coast Magazine 98 112 November 1989 Science Daily Congenital Rubella Nearly Eradicated in United States Retrieved October 11 2010 a b c d Stark A R American Academy of Pediatrics Committee on Fetus Newborn November 2004 AAP Policy Statement Levels of Neonatal Care Pediatrics 5 114 5 1341 1347 doi 10 1542 peds 2004 1697 PMID 15520119 March of Dimes Prematurity Archived from the original on July 30 2021 Retrieved October 12 2010 McGann E Staff Family Communications in the NICU An Expert Interview with Liza Cooper Medscape Medical News Retrieved October 12 2010 Hospital Announces Partnership Topeka Capital Journal Retrieved October 12 2010 Hikel K 2009 Preventing Prematurity An Expert Interview With Alan R Fleischman M D Medscape Ob Gyn amp Women s Health Freda MC March April 2010 Quality Fashionable Again MCN The American Journal of Maternal Child Nursing 2 35 2 69 doi 10 1097 nmc 0b013e3181cde3e9 PMID 20215944 Retrieved November 4 2010 Experts to Review Quality Improvement Programs to Prevent Preterm Birth Playground Gazette Retrieved November 4 2010 permanent dead link National Institutes of Health MedLine Plus Website Retrieved October 12 2010 Caley Linda M Sara Riemer and Helen S Weinstein Results Of A Nurse Led Workshop Designed To Prevent Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder Public Health Nursing 27 3 May Jun 2010 232 239 CINAHL with Full Text Web 21 Dec 2011 K Kyndely et al Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders Prevention An Exploratory Study Of Women s Use Of Attitudes Toward And Knowledge About Alcohol Journal of the American Academy of Nurse Practitioners 17 5 May 2005 187 193 CINAHL with Full Text Web 21 Dec 2011 And Down Will Come Baby Orange Coast Magazine 98 112 Nov 1989 Paddock Richard C Alcohol Warning Label Bill Is Derailed in Legislature Los Angeles Times 23 May 1987 23 May 1987 Web 21 Dec 2011 Nobrega S Building a sustainable infrastructure for statewide folic acid education The March of Dimes National Folic Acid Campaign American Public Health Association Meeting Retrieved October 12 2010 Robison J 4 June 2002 More Women Aware of Pre Prenatal vitamin Retrieved November 5 2010 Centers for Disease Control Prevention CDC 11 January 2008 Use of Supplements Containing Folic Acid Among Women of Childbearing Age United States 2007 MMWR Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 1 57 1 5 8 PMID 18185493 Retrieved November 5 2010 Painter K January 20 2008 A little slice of folic acid can help prevent birth defects USA Today Retrieved November 5 2010 New Folic Acid Seal Helps Women Choose Enriched Grain Foods To Help Prevent Birth Defects Science Daily January 15 2008 Retrieved November 5 2010 Allen amp Green 2004 March of Dimes Prematurity Campaign A Call to Action J Natl Med Assoc 96 5 686 688 PMC 2640653 PMID 15160986 Prematurity Campaign Report and Future Recommendations Document March of Dimes Foundation 2008 U S Gets a D for Preterm Birth Rates U S News amp World Report November 12 2008 Retrieved November 5 2010 March of Dimes Website Archived from the original on September 3 2014 Retrieved October 12 2010 Bern S Expanding newborn screening From advocacy to program implementation American Public Health Association website Retrieved October 12 2010 The March of Dimes Release Annual Report Card on Newborn Screening Program A Newsmaker Interview with Jennifer Howse PhD Medscape Medical News Retrieved October 12 2010 Berns S Expanding newborn screening From advocacy to program implementation American Public Health Association Retrieved October 12 2010 Science Daily Retrieved October 12 2010 NICU Family Support www marchofdimes org Retrieved 2020 09 21 My NICU Baby App www marchofdimes org Retrieved 2020 09 21 Laurence J 31 January 2006 Mediterranean Diet Reduces Birth Defects The Independent Archived from the original on November 11 2012 Retrieved November 7 2010 1 Million Preemie Babies Die Each Year U S News amp World Report October 4 2009 Retrieved November 7 2010 Strom S January 17 2008 March of Dimes Renames a Fund Raiser New York Times Retrieved November 5 2010 North Dakota Family Picked as March for Babies Ambassadors The Bismarck Tribune March 8 2010 Retrieved November 9 2010 Rose D 2003 March of Dimes Arcadia Publishing p 121 ISBN 0 7385 1253 2 Children s Medical Center March of Dimes Team Up for March for Babies event in Dallas The Dallas Morning News April 12 2010 Archived from the original on July 3 2010 Retrieved November 9 2010 March for Babies Retrieved November 9 2010 March for Babies Retrieved November 9 2010 Sullivan Meg November 12 1986 March of Dimes Lets John Finger Do the Walking to Raise Money Los Angeles Times Retrieved 2015 10 14 Reade Randy December 23 1989 Obituary John Harrison Finger first walker to raise funds for March of Dimes Orange County Register a b Sounds of Pertussis Campaign Makes Times Square Pit Stop PR Newswire US 11 Aug 2011 Newspaper Source Plus Web 21 Dec 2011 Brady S Health Care Salutes Sounds of Pertussis Campaign Health News Archived from the original on October 31 2010 Retrieved November 10 2010 Sounds of Pertussis Campaign Archived from the original on December 27 2010 Retrieved November 10 2010 Sound Off About Pertussis Wall Street Journal Retrieved November 5 2010 dead link Healthy Babies are Worth the Wait WSAV April 7 2008 Archived from the original on 2021 12 22 Retrieved November 7 2010 Rubin R May 11 2010 Premature Birth Rate Drops 2nd Year in a Row CDC Finds USA Today Retrieved November 7 2010 Who s Leading the Leading Health Indicators Healthy People 2020 www healthypeople gov a b Healthy Babies are Worth the Wait Archived from the original on 2018 06 12 Retrieved 2017 05 06 Kentucky Cabinet for Health and Family Service press release 27 March 2007 Archived from the original on 8 November 2010 Retrieved November 7 2010 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Healthy Babies are Worth the Wait Preventing Preterm Births through Community based Interventions An Implementation Manual PDF Family Health Outcomes Project University of California San Francisco Archived from the original PDF on 2021 10 17 Retrieved 2017 05 06 AMCHP Innovation Station Sharing Best Practices in Maternal amp Child Healthcare PDF AMCHP org Association of Maternal amp Child Health Programs 2015 Young J January 2008 Medical Web Watch Southern Medical Journal 101 1 110 doi 10 1097 SMJ 0b013e31815ba5aa PREEMIE Reauthorization Act S 252 H R 541 March of Dimes Archived from the original on 3 September 2014 Retrieved 11 November 2013 CBO H R 1281 Congressional Budget Office 6 June 2014 Retrieved 24 June 2014 a b Newborn Screening Saves Lives Reauthorization Act March of Dimes Retrieved 24 June 2014 Ault A February 1 2007 Despite Congressional Fix SCHIP Faces Shortfalls Internal Medicine News Archived from the original on March 28 2012 Retrieved November 11 2010 Levey N February 5 2009 Obama signs into law expansion of SCHIP health care program for children Chicago Tribune Archived from the original on April 30 2009 Retrieved November 11 2010 Hibbard S February 19 2009 Speaking for SCHIP Springfield Connection Retrieved November 11 2010 permanent dead link Bio of Doctor Virginia Apgar Changing The Face of Medicine Website Retrieved November 11 2010 March of Crimes A website run by People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals Archived from the original on May 11 2008 Retrieved April 17 2008 Chapter Summary Archived from the original on 2011 09 27 Retrieved 2011 07 09 Greenwald Howard P 2007 Organizations Management Without Control Sage Publications Inc p 369 ISBN 978 1 4129 4247 8 Charity Navigator Rating March of Dimes Retrieved 2017 04 24 March of Dimes 2011 990 Tax Filing page 10 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2015 06 17 Retrieved 2015 06 17 March of Dimes 2014 990 Tax Filing page 9 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2015 06 17 Retrieved 2015 06 17 Charity Navigator 2012 CEO Compensation Study PDF November 2012 Retrieved 2014 03 30 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to March of Dimes Official website At the President s Birthday Ball 1942 by the Glenn Miller Orchestra YouTube Fund Raising for Roosevelt unissued British Pathe newsreel footage without sound of the 1944 March of Dimes and the President s Birthday Ball incorrectly identified as political campaign fundraising YouTube America Salutes the President s Birthday Archived 2017 05 10 at the Wayback Machine March of Dimes fund appeals 1943 45 at the RadioGOLDINdex FDR s Birthday at the Franklin D Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title March of Dimes amp oldid 1182721182, wikipedia, wiki, 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