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US Fares Poorly in Child Welfare Survey

Children eat breakfast at the start of a day camp program at Casa Juan Diego St. Pius V Youth Center in June 2009 in Chicago, Illinois. The United States allocates more public funds to its children than most other industrialised states but gets relatively less than its peers in return, the OECD said in a report on Tuesday.
(AFP/Getty Images/File/Scott Olson)

PARIS - America has some of the industrial world's worst rates of infant mortality, teenage pregnancy and child poverty, even though it spends more per child than better-performing countries such as Switzerland, Japan and the Netherlands, a new survey indicates.

The OECD, a Paris-based watchdog of industrialized nations, urged the United States to shift more of its public spending to its youngest children, under the age of six, to improve their health and educational performance.

Posted in chldren, Health
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