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  Worldwide Service Project - IDD  
  IDD is the leading preventable cause of mental and physical retardation in the world today. The easiest way to prevent IDD is by iodization of salt, and Iodine has been routinely added to commercially produced salt in the industrialized world since the 1920's. However, in other parts of the world, there are as many as 1.5 billion people at risk, especially young children.

First launched in 1994, Kiwanis International's Worldwide Service Project's goal is to virtually eliminate iodine deficiency disorders (IDD) by raising $75 million. Through the dedication and hard work of the Kiwanis family, not only in raising money but also in raising awareness of the problem, motivating governments and industry to act, testing and monitoring, millions of children have been protected against the invisible but devastating effects of iodine deficiency. Kiwanians around the world work to sustain progress through advocacy, technical expertise, and education about the benefits of iodized salt. Due to a $75 million Kiwanis campaign in partnership with UNICEF, future generations of children no longer face the threat of mental retardation, cretinism, and a host of disabilities caused by IDD.

Members of the Kiwanis family can take great pride in their accomplishments. Today, about 70 percent of the people in the developing world have access to iodized salt, and UNICEF has hailed this project as one of the greatest public health triumphs of the 20th century.

Though Kiwanis exceeded its original goal of raising $75 million, there
is still work to be done. UNICEF reports there still are 113,000 children born each day
vulnerable to IDD. World leaders meeting at the United Nations General Assembly Special Session on Children in May 2002 - among them leaders of the Kiwanis family - agreed on a goal of achieving the sustainable elimination of iodine deficiency disorders by 2005. Kiwanis International and the Kiwanis International Foundation have set a Kiwanis family goal to raise at least an additional US $3 million.


Working with the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) and the U.S. Fund for UNICEF, the entire Kiwanis family are integral to the world leaders' vision of a world without iodine deficiency. With the powerful partnership in place, the objective of Universal Salt Iodization (USI) could be achieved as early as 2005. Today's twin challenges are to introduce salt iodization in all communities where it is not yet available and to ensure that people continue to use iodized salt where it is already available. The benefits for children and their families worldwide are clear: improved health, productivity, and hope.

Contributions are needed. For more information, please click .
 

 

  Read Around the World

Today, there are 90 million Americans lacking basic literacy skills, and 25% of parents cannot read a book to their children, according to the US Department of Education. An analysis of national data on nearly 100,000 US school children found that access to printed materials-and not poverty-is the "critical variable" affecting reading acquisition.

 
 
Members of the Kiwanis family hold this annual event to encourage children-and their parents-to appreciate reading. Kiwanis, Circle K, and Key Club sponsor Read Around the World internationally, with more than 600,000 members in some 13,000 clubs. Club members donate books, hold book parties, and read to children to provide children a source of inspiration.

As the honor chair for Kiwanis Read Around the World, First Lady Laura Bush remarks, "When parents take time to sit with their arm around their child everyday and read daily to them, it's really a wonderful message, and it's a great change for parents to have some intimacy with their child while they read to them."

 
 
  The 6th Read around the World event is scheduled from

February 1st to March 3rd, 2007

For more information, please click .

 

 

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