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Mississippi Ranks Worst for Children’s Well Being

JACKSON, Miss. — Larry Green is superintendent of a rural school district that stretches alongside the Mississippi River, and he knows how challenging life can be for children from poor families.

Many of the youngsters in Western Line School District start kindergarten or first grade with limited vocabularies, he said, and many come from homes where there are no guarantees of regular, nutritious meals.

“These kids, when they get to school, they’re already at a disadvantage,” Green said Monday.

It comes as no surprise to him or to some other Mississippi educators and policy makers that a new national survey ranks the perennially poor state as worst in the nation for children’s well being based on health and poverty statistics.

The annual Kids Count report from the Annie E. Casey Foundation, released Tuesday, uses information from 2007 and 2008.

The report says Mississippi ranked worst nationally in seven of 10 categories.

It says the state had the highest percentage of low-birthweight babies; the highest rates of infant mortality, child deaths and births to teenagers; the highest percentage of children in families where no parent has full-time, year-round employment; the highest percentage of children in poverty and the highest percentage of children in single-parent families.

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