Compare hotel prices and find the best deal - HotelsCombined.com

Heres How Dr. Seuss Born This Day In 1904 Was Part Of The Pro Vaccine ...

Theodor Seuss Geisel more commonly known as the beloved American author and illustrator Dr. Seuss and born 111 years ago today was made part of the pro vaccine movement in the late 1990s through an immunization campaign featuring his most cherished illustrations.

Then secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services Donna Shalala announced a national Dr. Seuss Immunization Awareness Campaign on Oct. 30 1997 along with Audrey Geisel the author's widow. A spinoff of the Clinton Administration's Childhood Immunization Initiative the campaign released prints of illustrations from Dr. Seuss' most famous works accompanied by rhymes encouraging parents to vaccinate their children.

Making sure that children receive the complete series of vaccinations on time is the key to preventing childhood disease. But too many parents don't know which shots their children need and when Shalala said in the press release announcing the campaign. This bold new campaign will teach the fundamentals of childhood immunization in a fun new way that all of us can enjoy. Dr. Seuss and Mrs. Geisel deserve our praise and gratitude for this innovative new campaign that will go a long way toward increasing immunization awareness.

From the 1997 HHS press release announcing the campaign

The national Dr. Seuss campaign was launched today during a national immunization partnership meeting in Atlanta. At the event one of the most recognizable Dr. Seuss characters the Cat in the Hat unveiled a limited series of six immunization posters featuring Dr. Seuss characters. The art was donated by Mrs. Geisel through Dr. Seuss Enterprises Inc. which controls the rights to his works. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will distribute the limited edition posters to health care providers medical clinics community centers and schools for display.

The six posters each feature a different Dr. Seuss character telling an immunization story in rhyme. Cat in the Hat reminds parents and doctors that each exam is a chance to bring kids up to date. On routine and catch up shots that shouldn't really wait. An illustration from the King's Stilts showing a quarantined child says What's going on here What's wrong with this fella Why isn't he protected against measles mumps and rubella

The campaign launched six years after Dr. Seuss' death to oral cancer. He died at 87.

Articles Source here

No comments:

Post a Comment

Pages