| When poor parents can't afford diapers, babies wear dirty diapers longer 
 
  MCT: Laurie Skrivan, St. Louis Post-Dispatch KeYanna Roddy changes the  diaper on her son, Byron, his sixth of the morning, on April 9, 2014, in  St. Louis. Because of many medications from his open-heart surgery,  Byron can go through 10-15 diapers a day, putting a strain on Roddy's  limited budget.
 
  1 day ago                                     By                  Nancy Cambria                   of St. Louis Post-Dispatch 
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 They are the first line of defense against infection and disease — and are even linked to preventing depression and violence.
 
 Desperate people will sometimes steal to get them.
 
 No, this is not a story about illicit pills or drug abuse. It's about disposable diapers, an item the poor need desperately.
 
 Researchers  are starting to realize "diaper need" not only causes obvious health  problems for children, but leads to depression in moms and poor social  and developmental outcomes for the child — even child abuse.
 
 It is  estimated that disposable diapers can cost up to $100 a month for one  baby. On average, a newborn goes through eight to 10 diapers a day, said  Melinda Ohlemiller, CEO of Nurses for Newborns.
 
 Nurses with the organization see the diaper need firsthand with their clients but can offer minimal help.
 
 To  provide diapers for their mostly poor clients, Ohlemiller said, the  organization would need 8,000 to 10,000 diapers a day. But the agency  can supply only about 12 diapers to established clients on an emergency  basis.
 
 One of its clients, Catalina Martinez of Overland, Mo.,  said she was unable to work after having her second child. It's been  difficult to afford diapers for a newborn and a toddler on her  boyfriend's salary. She's had to keep a diaper on her child longer than  she should.
 
 "I even have tried to get my oldest one to potty train. But she wouldn't train yet."
 
 Last  summer a study in the medical journal Pediatrics identified "diaper  need" among the poor as a growing health and psychological risk for  babies and their mothers.
 
 The study determined that as many as 30  percent of poor parents in New Haven, Conn., struggled to afford diapers  for their infants. It further linked diaper need as a factor causing  maternal depression, which can also lead to poor outcomes for children.
 
 "There's  just a great need ... and no one is calling attention to this," said  DiAnne Mueller, CEO of Crisis Nursery, a St. Louis-area child abuse  prevention agency.
 
 Crisis Nursery workers sometimes go  door-to-door in poor neighborhoods asking people what they need. The  answer is almost always the same: diapers and formula.
 
 Although  formula purchases can be federally subsidized, diapers are not covered  by food stamps through the federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance  Program or the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants  and Children, known as WIC.
 
 As a result, some food pantries are  inundated with requests for disposable diapers. But the pantries don't  get steady donations of them and don't always have them on the shelves.  When they do, they fly out of the door, said Marcia Mermelstein,  coordinator of the Harvey Kornblum Jewish Food Pantry in St. Louis.
 
 "We're  giving people four to six diapers when in reality when most people buy a  box of diapers, they're getting 24 or 48. It's like giving one tiny bar  of soap a month. It's not enough, it's a token gesture," Mermelstein  said.
 
 Families will take what they can get, she said.
 
 "They're taking diapers that are clearly too small and taping them together and using whatever they can."
 
 Although  charitable agencies see the diaper need, they can't make collecting and  distributing diapers their first priority because it takes away energy  and donations from their main services.
 
 "Yes, we need diapers,"  Mermelstein said. "But in the great scheme of things, we are a food  pantry and the highest priority is to give food for survival."
 
 Some  cities and regions have developed thriving diaper banks that collect  and promote donated diapers and act as a clearinghouse to agencies like  food pantries and community outreach centers.
 
 According to the  National Diaper Bank Network in Connecticut, about 100 established  diaper banks operate nationwide. Happy Bottoms in Kansas City, Mo., for  example, has distributed more than 1.5 million diapers to agencies that  work with the poor.
 
 But St. Louis is only in the beginning stages of developing such a resource.
 
 Jessica  Adams, a social worker, said she has filed the 501c paperwork for the  St. Louis Area Diaper Bank and hopes to begin taking donations and  making partnerships with agencies soon.
 
 "I think the biggest issue  in St. Louis is there's not a roundtable conversation going on about  diaper need," she said. "So spreading the word to involve every agency  will help everyone."
 
 Adams said she realized the need after she  went through a divorce with a toddler and three older children. Money  was scarce, and she relied on food pantries to get by.
 
 "I had to call family members for money for diapers," she said. "It's humiliating, absolutely humiliating."
 
 Nurses  for Newborns and Crisis Nursery workers hear of mothers rinsing out  disposable diapers and reusing them. More commonly they see horrid cases  of diaper rash.
 
 Mueller said when a baby presents with bad rashes  and even staph infections people unfairly conclude mothers are  neglectful. But further questioning almost always reveals families are  keeping the diapers on longer than they should because they don't have  enough.
 
 "Diapers are mandatory. They're not optional," said  Ohlemiller. "And yet families are making really hard decisions: Are we  going to buy diapers or formula or are we going to buy food? That stress  is putting a lot of hardships on families."
 
 Obtaining diapers can  be more expensive for the poor because most don't have enough cash on  hand to buy diapers in bulk at a cheaper cost per diaper. So they resort  to buying smaller packages at higher prices. If a family lacks a  working car, they often buy diapers at the local convenience store,  where the price skyrockets.
 
 Ohlemiller said cheaper cloth diapers  are typically not an option for the poor who often lack working washers  and dryers. Coin laundries often ban diapers in their machines for  sanitary reasons.
 
 Child care centers are another obstacle. Day  cares often ban cloth diapers for sanitary and logistical reasons.  Mothers using day cares are often in a double bind: They can't use cloth  diapers, and if they run out of disposable diapers, they can't send  their child to day care. Without day care, moms can't work.
 
 Ohlemiller  said families sometimes force toilet training on children who are not  developmentally ready and fail, adding further stress in the household.
 
 And  the long-term issues of diaper needs are more chilling, said Mueller.  Babies and toddlers with sore bottoms are cranky, so they cry more and  bond less.
 
 "What we see is a higher rate of child abuse," said  Mueller. "The child is unable to be consoled, and the parent already has  such limited resources both financially and emotionally. If the baby  keeps crying and crying, it really gets to most anyone, so the risk of  injury to the child is certainly much higher."
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