| Girl,
11, raises awareness of low-income healthcare
options - She travels across Miami-Dade County
giving presentations on public health resources
for low-income families A year ago,
11-year-old Jasjuana Weathers was just along
for the ride, accompanying her mother as she
made her rounds as an outreach worker with Human
Services Coalition of Dade County.
But after months of watching her mother on
the job, Jasjuana became an expert by osmosis.
She perfected her own presentation on the programs
and benefits available to low-income families
in Miami-Dade.
Now she travels from schools to churches to
health fairs, directing her audience to resources
including the Earned Income Tax Credit, KidCare
and other affordable healthcare programs.
"Sometimes I think she's trying to take
my job," Juanda Weathers-Shuler said with
a laugh as her daughter prepared to speak to
parents and teachers at Coconut Grove Elementary
School's annual open house this week. "She
does it just as well as I do. She's really informed."
HER GOAL: BE A DOCTOR
But Jasjuana, a sixth-grader at Herbert A.
Ammons Middle School, has different career aspirations.
She plans to attend Harvard Medical School to
become a doctor.
The Richmond Heights family's own struggle
to pay for healthcare prompted Jasjuana's decision.
"I've seen how high the prices are to
get a checkup," Jasjuana said. "When
I grow up I want to make it easy on people."
In June 2004 the family was deemed ineligible
for Medicaid, the state-federal medical plan
for the poor and disabled. Weathers-Shuler,
a single mother of two, said she lost access
to the program because her annual income was
$12 more than the limit.
It was six months before the Department of
Children and Families granted Weathers-Shuler's
youngest daughter, Raekiya, coverage under Florida
KidCare, a state health insurance program for
children and teenagers.
At the time, Weathers-Shuler said she earned
$23,000 a year.
Those six months cost her more than $2,700
in doctors' visits and medication. Raekiya,
who is now 6, suffers from asthma and other
health problems related to her premature birth.
Jasjuana's moonlighting for the social service
agency doesn't surprise Isaac Brown, her longtime
gym teacher at Frank C. Martin Elementary. He
said her talent has always been processing information
and passing it along to others.
SKILLED COMMUNICATOR
He watched her hone the skill last year while
mentoring kindergarten students, and it's one
of the reasons he selected her to be on the
school's Safety Patrol.
"She was very successful at communicating
with the smaller kids," Brown said.
Jasjuana, an honor roll student from first
through fifth grades, won the prize two years
ago at the Cinderella Ball, a community event
held at R.R. Moton Elementary School and geared
toward teaching girls etiquette.
At the Coconut Grove event this week, three
generations of Weathers women -- including grandmother
Irma Weathers, a nurse at the Center of Information
and Orientation in North Miami who works with
HIV/AIDS patients -- were together to hear Jasjuana
make her pitch.
FAMILY SUPPORT
Grandmother, mother and little sister listened
intently as Jasjuana addressed the more than
200 people seated at rows of tables in the school's
cafeteria.
"Did you know many people in your community
go to bed hungry every day and it's not by choice?
Did you know you can get your taxes done for
free if you make $34,000 or less a year?"
Weathers-Shuler stood nearby as her daughter
gave the brief presentation. The mother slowly
pressed her palms from chest-level toward the
floor, motioning for Jasjuana to slow down.
Calm down. Breathe.
"Her spirit just shines everywhere she
goes," Weathers-Shuler said as she watched
the girl. "She's determined to make it."
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