International Women’s Day! Please share!

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Today is International Women’s Day and I’d like to wish each of my gal pals a very happy day! I have some tweets/Facebook statuses I’d love for you to share. These are provided by Mom Bloggers for Social Good which I am extremely proud to be a part of.

All you have to do is click the tweet/post and it should automatically open, pre-filled for you to submit.

Girl Up
Girl Up addresses the needs of adolescent girls in developing nations and is celebrating International Women’s Day by highlighting women you admire.
Tweet
Facebook

Women for Women International
We’re so happy to partner with Women for Women International on their Join Me on the Bridge campaign to honor and support women survivors of war.
Tweet
Facebook

World Food Programme
Did you know the World Food Programme feeds 20 million children through schools around the world every day? Let’s help spread the word about Molly, a Kenyan girl who videotapes her personal story of living in a slum.
Twitter
Facebook

Oxfam
Oxfam has created beautiful e-cards to send to women you want to celebrate on International Women’s Day.
Tweet


Thank you and Happy International Women’s Day!!!

Disclosure: Information provided by: Mom Bloggers for Social Good. No monetary compensation was received.



“Dream Big for Africa” with Katharine McPhee #socialgoodmoms

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We have all, undoubtedly, heard of Malaria. But do you really know the mind boggling statistics, in Africa, behind this horrific disease? It kills one child every minute. EVERY MINUTE! So just imagine, if you will, that you have 5 children. Now imagine the 5 of them contracted Malaria. Within 5 short minutes, your entire family could be wiped out. Gone. From a horrific disease that can be lessened by distributing life-saving mosquito nets and malaria medication and education.

About Malaria

Malaria is an infectious blood disease caused by a parasite that is transmitted from one human to another by the bite of infected Anopheles mosquitoes. Malaria symptoms, which often appear about 9 to 14 days after the infectious mosquito bite, include fever, headache, vomiting and other flu-like symptoms. If drugs are not available or the parasites are resistant to them, the infection can lead to coma, life-threatening anemia, and death.

Malaria killed 655,000 people in 2010. Ninety-one percent of malaria-related deaths occur in Africa, the majority of whom are children under 5 years of age.

Malaria information from http://www.malarianomore.org/malaria

You can help! And you might just win a fantastic prize in doing so!

Last week our partner Malaria No More launched their “Dream Big for Africa’ campaign. Anyone who texts 85944 will donate $10 to Malaria No More and be automatically entered to win a trip to Africa with Smash star Katharine McPhee.

From now until February 16th, when you text the word “DREAM” to 85944, you’ll donate $10 to Malaria No More and begin your entry for a chance to travel to Africa with Katharine McPhee this spring*. Within 24 hours of donating, you’ll receive a follow up text message with a special link to an online form where you’ll enter your contact information and one sentence on your DREAM for Africa. On February 24th, 10 finalists will be notified and asked to submit a 300-word blog post and a simple 30 second video on why you’re the best person for the trip. The best blog post and video will be named the winner on February 26th.

Don’t wait to participate! You only have until February 16th to text. Details about the “Dream Big for Africa” campaign are here: www.MalariaNoMore.org/Dream

*A one-time donation of $10 will be added to your mobile phone bill or deducted from your pre-paid balance. Message and Data Rates May Apply. Text STOP to 85944 to stop; Text HELP to 85944 for help.

Spread the word on Twitter with this tweet:
Text 85944 to donate $10 to @MalariaNoMore and be entered to win a trip to Africa with @NBCSmash star @katharinemcphee. #socialgoodmoms

Like , Follow , Get Involved and Donate.

Disclosure: Information for this post received as a member of Mom Bloggers For Social Good. No monetary compensation was received.



Part 2. Champions for Kids Simple Service Projects: #AbbottCFK Nutrition Pack A Snack #cbias

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The other day I told you about another Champions for Kids project I am working on to help bring nutritious snacks to children in need. This is the Abbott Champions for Kids Pack a Snack Campaign. For my Snack Pack, I headed to Walmart in search of Abbott brand products because they are the sponsor of this particular Champions for Kids Service Project.

Abbott brand products include PediaSure, PediaSure Sidekicks, Zone Perfect Bars, Similac, etc. Because I was making a Snack Pack for a child, I searched for products that would not only be healthy but enticing as well. I am also going to make a Snack Pack for the adult in their lives but only had time and money for the one pack this week, which made me sad. Anyway, I headed to Walmart and this is what I purchased:

  • Zone Perfect Peanut Butter Chocolate Bars
  • PediaSure Sidekicks Chocolate Shakes
  • GoGo SqueeZ Squeezable Applesauce
  • Raisins
  • Cheerios
  • Dole Fruit Crisp Peaches with Granola

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In my opinion, these are all snacks that are not only healthy, but shelf stable and easy to eat AND give them a good variation of fruit, fiber and fun! These are also products that my own children enjoy so I know they are kid-taste-bud approved.

I chose to take my Snack Pack to the local Community Action Center. They not only help folks pay utility bills but they also donate food and other services. Their funds and goods go very quickly at the beginning of each month and there are still folks in need during the middle and end of the month so I am going to donate my Snack Pack this week, along with the adult Snack Pack that I am making. I hope a family gets some much needed nourishment from our Snack Packs and knows that there are people thinking of them and praying for them. I hope the adult Snack Pack helps them feel hope and encouragement to seek further help, resources and a better life.

CALL TO ACTION: I’m asking that you also join in and create a Snack Pack for a child/family in need in your area using the great Abbott products. Details can be found here: http://championsforkids.org/simple-service2/

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“Like” Champions for Kids on Facebook!

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  • More than16 million children under the age of eighteen in the United States are food insecure—unable to consistently access adequate amount of nutritious food necessary for a healthy life. Even more heartbreaking is the fact that more than three million children under the age of five are food insecure.
  • While having enough food is important, the nutritional quality of that food is equally
    important. Approximately 17% (or 12.5 million) of children and adolescents ages 2 –19 are obese, and 1 of 7 low-income, preschool-aged children is obese.
    (Sources: Feeding America; Center For Disease Control)

You can view my entire shopping experience and see the products I looked at in my Google + Story.

Disclosure: This shop has been compensated as part of a social shopper insights study for Collective Bias. All opinions are my own.



Champions for Kids Simple Service Projects: #AbbottCFK Nutrition Pack A Snack #cbias

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Do you remember last month when I participated in the Champions for Kids: SIMPLE Service Project and created a Disney themed stocking for a child in need? Well, I am once again participating in one of the AWESOME Champions for Kids projects! This time I am participating inthe Abbott Champions for Kids campaign.

You may be asking yourself what that is? I’ll tell you. Abbott is the creator of products such as Similac, Pediasure, Ensure and Zone Perfect Bars to name a few. For the Abbott Champions for Kids campaign I will be making a Snack Pack and donating it to a child who could use some extra nourishment. You’d be surprised at the statistics for your counties. Many, MANY children are in need of a good meal. Just look at these statistics from around the country:

•     More than16 million children under the age of eighteen in the United States are food insecure—unable to consistently access adequate amount of nutritious food necessary for a healthy life.        Even more heartbreaking is the fact that more than three million children under    the    age    of    five are food insecure.

•     While having enough food is important, the nutritional quality of that food is    equally
important.  Approximately 17% (or    12.5    million)  of  children and adolescents ages 2 –19 are obese, and 1 of 7 low-income, preschool-aged children is obese.
(Sources:  Feeding America; Center For Disease Control)

What many people don’t seem to realize, and I’m saying this to explain my opinion of some of these obesity numbers, is that if you have lost income but still don’t qualify for WIC or food assistance programs or if you don’t know where to find the resources a bag of cheeseburgers from the value menu is usually cheaper than purchasing food to cook a full meal. I am saying this from experience with a family of 6. No, it isn’t right, but it is a fact that many will relate to. And, no, I don’t feed my family cheeseburgers every day or even every week but I do know that it can be cheaper. But it isn’t healthier. Some families have to sacrifice healthier for a while in order to make ends meet. I get that. I understand it. So I am going to make my Snack Packs and donate them to the local Community Action Center so that some of these children and their parents can have some nutrition added to their diet. I am going to make one for the kids but I am also going to make a Snack Pack for the adults in their lives because they will function better with a healthy snack as well.

CALL TO ACTION: I’m asking that you also join in and create a Snack Pack for a child/family in need in your area using the great Abbott products. Details can be found here: http://championsforkids.org/simple-service2/

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I’ll be posting my Snack Packs in a separate post so stay tuned for that.

“Like” Champions for Kids on Facebook!

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Disclosure: This shop has been compensated as part of a social shopper insights study for Collective Bias. All opinions are my own.



January is Cervical Cancer Awareness Month in Kentucky

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The following is extremely important to me for one very specific reason. My mom had cervical cancer in 1994. My mom is no longer with us. Period.

In 1994 she was diagnosed with end-stage cervical cancer, usually a silent killer. She was considered “lucky” because her tumors had grown so large they had turned her cervix outward, pressed against her pelvic area and begun to burst causing bleeding and severe pain. Her oncologist and radiologist told her there really wasn’t anything they could do at that point and gave her approx. 10 months! She wasn’t ready to just give up. And somehow convinced them to go ahead with “aggressive radiation therapy”. That was her life sentence. Miraculously, the cancer was cured. We all cheered her bravery and thanked God we still had her. Unfortunately, the massive amounts of radiation required to rid the cancer, continued to rip her internal organs to shreds. For 9 years, she battled one thing after another. My dates may be slightly off but here is the gist:

    1994: diagnosed and treated for cervical cancer
    1999: began passing stool via vaginal opening, requiring a colostomy.
    2001: began passing urine via vaginal opening. Diagnosed with hole in bladder. No treatment due to massive scar tissue.
    2002: all urine production ceased. Suffered renal/kidney failure, placed on dialysis.
    2003: Jan. suffered stroke. Recovered.
    2003: suffered congestive heart failure
    2003 – developed fluid on lungs requiring lung peel
    2003: SOMEHOW during this time, she held a baby shower for me!!! I don’t know how she did it.
    2003: repeated hospital stays due to fluid, requiring emergency dialysis treatments
    2003: August – called in Hospice. She couldn’t retain any nourishment at all due to scar tissue in her stomach and bowels. She vomited constantly and couldn’t keep even a sip of water down.
    2003: October 16 my mom passed away. She basically starved to death.

She’s GONE! She doesn’t get to know her grandchildren. Her life and the happiness we had with her is gone. Forever.

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Folks, I know you all are scared of new vaccines. But we have the opportunity to SAVE OUR CHILDREN’S LIVES! I can 100% guarantee you that my mother would have supported this vaccine if she had lived. She talked about the need for one before she died. She knew the importance of it. So please, I’m asking you to at least do the research and consider it.

And at the very least, women get your Pap smears and everyone be screened regularly. Please!

Thank you for reading her story. Please check out the info below. And please leave any comments in the comments box.

January is Cervical Cancer Awareness Month in Kentucky and Cervical Cancer-Free Kentucky (www.causethemovement.org) today launched an awareness campaign that includes a Facebook application to demonstrate in a very personal way how cervical cancer might affect a user’s circle of friends.

The somewhat disquieting approach was chosen because Kentucky has one of the highest rates of cervical cancer in the country and yet Kentuckians are not taking advantage of the measures that make the disease almost completely preventable. Organizers want to move residents to share with their friends information about cervical cancer, the importance of regular screenings and the availability of the only “anti-cancer” vaccine for both female and male adolescents and young adults.

I’ve also pasted in the press release for you below:

Personalized Awareness Campaign
Targets High Cervical Cancer Rates in Kentucky

LEXINGTON, KY, January 3, 2011– More than 90 percent of cervical cancer cases can be prevented through regular screenings and the only anti-cancer vaccine available today, yet about a fifth of Kentucky women 18 and older haven’t had a Pap test in the last three years and fewer than one in nine eligible Kentucky females have received the full three-shot vaccine series. A new awareness campaign launched today by Cervical Cancer Free Kentucky uses a Facebook application to demonstrate in a very personal way how the devastating disease might affect users’ circle of friends.

“What if we had a vaccine to prevent breast cancer?” asks University of Kentucky Professor Baretta R. Casey, MD, MPH, who is also a family physician and director of Cervical Cancer Free Kentucky (CCFKY) initiative. “Surely, you’d see women going in droves to their doctors’ offices to get the vaccine and sharing the news with everyone they know. The HPV vaccine, which prevents cervical cancer, is the only anti-cancer vaccine available today. Kentucky has one of the highest mortality rates in the country from cervical cancer, but we have the tools to change that. We just need to use them.”

Through the new “Cause the Movement” campaign, Cervical Cancer-Free Kentucky hopes to reduce Kentucky’s cervical cancer rate, which iseighthhighest in the country, through three steps:

· Educating Kentuckians about cervical cancer, prevention and treatment;

· Increasing the number of women who get cervical cancer prevention screenings, and who get follow up testing and/or treatment when the screenings yield abnormal results; and

· Encouraging both males and females ages 9 to 26 to get the HPV vaccine series.

The campaign will include speaking engagements, news announcements, posters and creation of a new website. When users visit www.causethemovement.org, they are taken to an application that connects with their Facebook account and pulls from their friends’ profile photos to demonstrate the potential impact of cervical cancer on their social circle. Hundreds of women in Kentucky develop cervical cancer every year, and many of those women die. The application randomly selects from users’ friends to illustrate these facts, dramatically darkening the profile photos of those representing the percentage wholikely would die from cervical cancer. The application then offers viewers the chance to share the Cause the Movement campaign link with their Facebook friends.

“Almost all women who die from cervical cancer failed to get Pap tests or they got them too infrequently,” said Elisia Cohen, Ph.D., director of strategic communications with CCFKY. “We want to emphasize that information about preventing cervical cancer is worth sharing with friends. The application encourages women to do just that – to cause a movement toward higher levels of understanding, screening and vaccination.”

Selected Cervical Cancer Statistics:
· Statewide, approximately one in five women have not been screened in the past three years. The percentage is even higher in the Barren River Area Development District (Barren, Butler, Edmonson, Hart, Logan, Metcalfe, Simpson and Warren Counties), where 31 percent of women over the age of 18 have not been screened in the past three years.
· The HPV vaccine is recommended for females ages9– 26. Although about one in four Kentucky adolescent women have initiated vaccination, less than one in nine adolescent women in Kentucky have received the full HPV vaccine series (all three doses). Even fewer young adult women over the age of 18 have received the full series of the HPV vaccine. The vaccine is also approved for use in males, and the CDC recently recommended guidelines for its use in males ages 11-26. (For specific guidelines, see http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm6050a3.htm?s_cid=mm6050a3_e)
· Nationwide, an estimated 12,710 have contracted cervical cancer in 2011; and 4,290 women have died of the disease. (National Cancer Institute)

About Cervical Cancer:
Cervical cancer is usually slow growing, and does not cause symptoms in the early stages. In more advanced stages, women may experience abnormal vaginal bleeding, increased vaginal discharge and pelvic pain or pain during sex. Infection with HPV (human papillomavirus) is the cause of nearly all cervical cancers. HPV infections are very common, and are passed from person to person through sexual or skin-to-skin contact. According to the National Cancer Institute, most adults have been infected with HPV at some time in their lives, but most infections clear up on their own. Factors that increase the chances than an HPV infection will develop into cervical cancer include lack of regular Pap tests, smoking, extended use of birth control pills, numerous sexual partners, a weakened immune system and giving birth to five or more children.

About Cervical Free Cancer Kentucky:
The Cervical Cancer-Free Kentucky Initiative is working to prevent cervical cancer in Kentucky through prevention of Human Papillomavirus (HPV) infection, timely screening and diagnosis, access to follow-up care and treatment, and changes in cervical cancer-related health policy. The Rural Cancer Prevention Center at the University of Kentucky College of Public Health developed the initiative in order to reduce the burden of cervical cancer in the Commonwealth. For more information, visit www.cervicalcancerfreeky.org.



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