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Research shows upgraded equipment at child care centers improves health | Research shows upgraded equipment at child care centers improves health |
| July 06, 2007 | |
![]() Photograph of Dr. Jonathon Kotch Jonathan Kotch, MD, professor of maternal and child health
at the School of Public Health, studied 46 child care centers in North Carolina.
Half were provided $10,000 in equipment upgrades and half used existing
equipment. Improved equipment included
automatic faucets, foot-activated waste bins, and seamless polymer tabletop
surfaces. Even though staff in both groups received sanitation and hygiene
training, staff and children in the centers with improved equipment stayed
about 50% more healthy than those without it.
(Children in the upgrade group averaged less than one illness per 100
days, compared with 1.58 illnesses per 100 days in the control group.) Kotch said the extra investment in a child care facility results in other savings, including medical costs and the cost of parents having to be absent from work to care for a sick child. # # # News and Observer (Raleigh) story: Note: Dr. Kotch can be reached at (919) 966-5976 or jonathan_kotch@unc.edu. School of Public Health contact: Ramona DuBose, director of communications, (919) 966-7467 or ramona_dubose@unc.edu. |
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| Last updated July 06, 2007 |


