Date: Fri 22-May-1998
Date: Fri 22-May-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: SUZANN
Quick Words:
T.-Berry-Brazelton-children
Full Text:
Brazelton Urges America To Value Its Children More
(with cuta)
BY SUZANNA NYBERG
DANBURY -- At a recent lecture at Western Connecticut State University,
internationally known pediatrician Dr T. Berry Brazelton made a passionate
appeal for American society to do more on behalf of children and their
families.
Since traveling the country in the early 1990s for the National Commission of
Children, Dr Brazelton has concluded that the United States is the least child
and family oriented country in the world.
"Every European country is years ahead of us," he said. "They pay attention to
child care."
Dr Brazelton would like to see the US move in the direction of countries such
as France by staffing child care centers with highly trained workers and
paying them well. "It's absurd what we pay people," he said. He would also
like to see the ratios of teachers to children lowered in the classroom until
they reach a manageable size as well as to see a classroom that emphasizes
nurturing over curriculum. "We don't need to have a curriculum in place until
children are older," he said. "We need to encourage interaction and
socialization."
The capacity of even young children to interact and connect with others
continually amazes Dr Brazelton. He spoke of seven-month-old babies rubbing
each others' feet as a way of becoming acquainted and showed films of infants
not more than ten days old wriggling to get their mother's attention. "At
three days, a baby will choose her mother's voice over any other woman's
voice," Dr Brazelton said. "At ten days, she can choose her mother's face."
The pediatrician has observed babies the world over who demonstrate such
abilities: Asian babies, he noted, will follow a moving object with their eyes
for up to 30 minutes; babies in Kenya are so excited at life that they reach
for objects at only a couple of days. "We need to get excited for children and
value their motor development and their enthusiasm," he said.
Dr Brazelton worries particularly about African American children, whose
parents, in their anxiety to make sure their children fit in with the dominant
culture, try to curb their exuberance. He also worries that as this culture
does not celebrate the exciting things newborns can do, it also does not
celebrate its diversity. "We see our diversity as a negative, not a positive,"
he said.
For Dr Brazelton, there are many other biases by which we live that need to be
changed. Americans, he said, tend to believe that the family is a
self-sufficient unit, and that if it cannot maintain its self-sufficiency,
something is wrong with that unit, not the culture itself. "The pioneer days
are over," he said. "That model no longer works. It will be tragic for us all
if we don't help families."
A Mother Is `Good Enough'
Another bias that needs to be eradicated, Dr Brazelton thinks, is that women
should remain at home with their children, and that if they don't stay home,
children will suffer.
"For 70 percent of American families, this idea is not possible." he said. Dr
Brazelton believes that we have created a culture in which women can succeed
at home or in the workplace, but they do not receive enough financial and
moral support. He also said that often women will come to him bemoaning that
they are only mothers, without careers. "Being a mother should be good
enough," he said.
Instead of investing ourselves in outmoded concepts that do not suffice for
this age, Dr Brazelton supports quality child care. Although he suspects that
his vision will not be realized in his lifetime, he thinks that with enough
political pressure the country can head in a more pro-child direction.
He has spoken with both the President and First Lady regarding a viable child
care system. Also, he has commended Hillary Rodham Clinton for her efforts in
support of the Family and Medical Leave Act which was passed in 1993. "This
was an important gesture toward American families," he said. "But it has only
affected five percent of the population." Dr Brazelton claimed that while the
bill may have made some corporate leaders wonder what they could be doing for
families, it has not had a great impact because most parents do not dare to
take advantage of it.
Need For Childcare
Dr Brazelton has even lectured President Clinton regarding welfare reform
legislation. "We can't let women go to work without first taking care of their
children," he said. "No woman will leave her kids in a child care center she
does not trust."
Dr Brazelton hopes that the Kennedy-Hatch Bill, pending childcare legislation
to be funded with money from tobacco companies, will take steps to improve
child care and health care for women and their children.
According to Dr Brazelton, 40 percent of American children receive no
preventive health care. At a time when they most need a supportive medical
outreach system, they are getting neither regular check-ups nor immunizations.
Dr Brazelton attributes the problem not to parental negligence or ignorance,
but to insensitivity on the part of health care providers. "Parents don't see
that they get anything back but hours of waiting and a screaming kid," he
said. He believes that we need to make office visits conducive to a return by
scheduling appointments when parents of similarly aged children can be
together, by greeting the child, and by offering her toys. These seemingly
little things, he stresses, can mean much. "We need to use the development and
excitement at each new stage of growth as a language for preventive health
care," he said.
Ultimately, the direction in which we move, Dr Brazelton believes, will be
indicative of our values. "Right now, we value war, aggression, and money,
none of which we really want to hand down to kids," he said. "We either must
get back to values or we need to find some."
