** ADVANCE FOR SUNDAY, MARCH  20 **  Women watch as children play at Palega Recreation Center and Playground in San Francisco, Thursday, March 17, 2011. Over the objections of organized labor and its neighboring bedroom communities, San Francisco is moving forward with what is billed as the nation's toughest hire locally ordinance. The law, which takes effect March 25, requires contractors on municipal construction projects to initially select 20 per cent of their workers from the ranks of city residents. (AP Photo)

Rankings show Kansas up in child health, but down in child poverty

July 23, 2015  |    |  2 min read

 

Kansas improved its ranking in child health but dropped in child poverty in the latest data released by a national nonprofit that advocates for children.

The state retained its No. 15 overall ranking from the Annie E. Casey Foundation in its 2015 Kids Count survey published Tuesday.

The latest information comes from 2013 and shows Kansas improving from No. 21 to No. 13 in the nation based on four measures of child health: low birth weight (7 percent), children without health insurance (6 percent), child and teen deaths per 100,000 (28 percent), and teens who abuse drug and alcohol (5 percent).

All four measures improved slightly compared with the previous year, driving Kansas’ eight-place move in the overall rankings.

“We continue to work to protect and improve the health of all Kansans,” said Sara Belfry, director of communications for the Kansas Department of Health and Environment.

Kansas remained at No. 12 in education, improved from 25th to 24th in family and community, and dropped from No. 7 to No. 9 in measures of economic well-being.

The raw numbers used to measure kids’ economic well-being in Kansas all improved slightly from 2012 to 2013, but not as much as they did in other states.

“Even when we’re making progress, those gains are failing to keep up with the rest of the nation,” said Shannon Cotsoradis, president and CEO of the nonprofit Kansas Action for Children. “We’re falling behind instead of enacting smart policies that would change the lives of Kansas kids for the better.”

Cotsoradis noted that the state’s child poverty rate increased from 15 percent in 2008 to 19 percent in 2013, and that 9 percent of Kansas kids lived in “high poverty areas” in 2013 compared with 2 percent in 2008.

She said Kansas kids are “stuck with a recession-era quality of life” because income tax cuts passed in 2012 are preventing the state from returning its investment in child welfare programs to pre-recession levels.

Andy Marso is a reporter for KHI News Service in Topeka, a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor team.

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