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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Tuesday, Dec 13 2016

Full Issue

Want Fewer Adults With Expensive Problems? Catch At-Risk Kids By Age 3, Study Finds

"About 20 percent of the population use the lion's share of public services," says Duke University professor Terrie Moffitt, a senior researcher on a new study that links those high expenses to the health of the subjects' brains all the way back when they were tested at age 3.

WBUR: Expensive Problems: Study Links Early Childhood Brains To High Public Costs In Mid-Life 

A new study suggests that your earliest years may be even more critical than previously thought: Your brain health before you're 3, it finds, may well predict how much you cost society in mid-life, including your health care bills. (Goldberg, 12/12)

Atlanta Journal Constitution: To Change Odds For At-Risk Kids, Provide Quality Child Care From Birth

In his widely cited 2009 study, Nobel Prize winning economist James Heckman documented a 7 to 10 percent annual return on investments in quality preschool programs for 3-and 4-year-olds. In a study released today, Heckman makes an even more compelling economic argument for programs that begin at birth. Heckman and his team found high-quality birth-to-five programs for disadvantaged children can deliver a 13 percent per-child, per-year return on investment through reduced crime and health costs and better outcomes in education, civic engagement and employment. (Downey, 12/12)

Seattle Times: Study: Early Support For Children Reaps Big Benefits 

The study, released Monday, shows that the services offered by the two North Carolina programs led to an increase in lifetime earnings for the children and their parents. All the children, who were African American and lived in low-income families, received an array of services from birth to age 5, aimed at improving their education, nutrition and health. The study’s authors also linked such programs to a reduction in criminal behavior and improved health outcomes, and noted those benefits were particularly pronounced for males. (Morton, 12/12)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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