Our Team
Current Staff
Marilyn Barr
Founder and Executive Director
Brian Lopez
Marketing Director
Ryan Steinbeigle
Development Director
Amy Wicks
Information and Research Specialist
Julia Johnson Baker
Research Associate
Danielle Vázquez
Marketing Specialist, Conference Coordinator
Lisa Peirce
Financial Controller
Teresa Rady
Finance Department
Julie Price
Director, International Prevention Program, Period of PURPLE Crying Program
Marti Woolford
International Program Specialist
Kimberly Buck
Utah Program Coordinator, Development Associate
Kassi McMullin
Distribution Coordinator
Brandon Freeman
Graphic Design and Technology Associate
Governing Board
Jill Moore
Chair of the Board
Ogden, UT, USA
Lori Fraser, M.D.
Vice Chair
Salt Lake City, UT, USA
Michele Poole
Secretary/Treasurer
Lake Worth, FL, USA
Alex Levin, MD, MHSC, FAAO, FRCSC
Vice Chair/Chair of the IAB
Philadelphia, PA, USA
Board Members
Gina Maughan
Ogden, UT, USA
Jeff Moore
Ogden, UT, USA
Cosmo (Gary) Young
Ogden, UT, USA
International Advisory Board
Alex Levin, MD, MHSC, FAAO, FRCSC
Chair of the Board
Philadelphia, PA, USA
David Chadwick, MD
Vice Chair
La Mesa, CA, USA
Randell Alexander, MD, PhD
Jacksonville, FL, USA
Ronald G. Barr, MA, MDCM, FRCPC
Vancouver, BC, Canada
Robert Block, MD
Tulsa, OK, USA
Mary Case, MD
St. Louis, MO, USA
Tom Fallon, JD
Madison, WI, USA
Brian Holmgren, JD
Nashville, TN, USA
Carole Jenny, MD, MBA
Providence, RI, USA
John M. Leventhal, MD
New Haven, CT, USA
Philip Wheeler, DCI
London, England
Letters from the Executive Director and Chair of the Board
Letter from the Executive Director
Our annual report is a good time for me to share my thoughts about important events, challenges and accomplishments that, as the executive director, I think about during the year. I would like everyone looking over this annual report to know that I am very proud of the many great strides that have been made by the NCSBS team as we continue our work to prevent shaken baby syndrome and infant abuse.
Our prevention program, the Period of PURPLE Crying, is reaching more parents and caregivers every year and in 2011 we reached over half a million parents with this program. The PURPLE program is not only in North America but also Australia, New Zealand and Japan.
In 2012, we will host our Twelfth International Conference on Shaken Baby Syndrome/Abusive Head Trauma (SBS/AHT). We had an astounding response and the program will have 108 presentations and 178 presenters. It will be the largest conference we have ever organized. This clearly shows the science regarding SBS/AHT and the need for training is alive and well.
The annual report is an important time to recognize our generous donors. We could not do this work without the generous contributions of all those individuals and large organizations who continually support our important work. These people keep the work going and we appreciate every one of them.
I would also like to focus my comments this year on the people who make this work possible and make it such a success. Our Governing Board works tireless to insure we are held accountable to high standards of ethics in our science, work, training, programs and fiscal management. Our impressive International Scientific Advisory Board is the most impressive group of experts on SBS in the world and they are very much involved in all we do. They review our programs, our training materials and our conference program. Both of these important boards are available to me on a daily basis for consultation, advice and encouragement.
The other incredibility important group of people I want to acknowledge giving them my highest acclamation, respect and appreciation is our wonderful team. These highly intelligent and motivated people are some of the most impressive individuals I have ever had the privilege to work with.
The National Center on Shaken Baby Syndrome deals with a very serious and tragic subject every day. I am so grateful for the honor and privilege to interact with the inspired people who cross our paths, support us and accomplish this work every day.
Letter from the Chair of the Board
Thought leader and pioneer Leonardo DaVinci is credited with an observation that I find very true and applicable today. He said that "people of accomplishment rarely sit back and let things happen to them. Rather, they go out and happen to things." The NCSBS has gone out and "happened to many things" during its history of working to prevent infant abuse. This legacy did NOT come from sitting idle and hoping that parents and caregivers would somehow realize the devastating effects of shaking and abuse. Rather, the strides forward taken by NCSBS have been driven by action and perseverance in efforts to ensure that families receive the education, training and skills needed to care for society’s most innocent and helpless members.
It has been a great source of inspiration to watch the NCSBS grow and expand its services and programs throughout North America over the past several years. Our educational materials are now being used in all 50 States and in nearly all Canadian provinces and territories. Parents and caregivers are now receiving the education they need to understand and cope with normal infant crying.
Everyone associated with NCSBS has worked diligently this past year to strengthen our infrastructure and to develop the tools, resources and processes necessary to support our ever-growing needs.
We are encouraged by the progress we have made and are motivated to expand our influence as we continue to work with a growing number of partners and professionals.
Our mission of preventing the devastating impact of infant abuse is one that will not be fulfilled unless we all adopt the DaVinci credo of making good things happen in an always expanding reach.

Jill Moore
Chair of the Board
Eleventh International Conference on Shaken Baby Syndrome/Abusive Head Trauma Takes a Powerful Stand!
NCSBS conference provides attendees an enlightened perspective about the growing controversy surrounding SBS/AHT fictitious by the media and a minority group of overzealous individuals.
The NCSBS’s Eleventh International Conference on SBS/AHT was held September 12-14, 2010 in Atlanta/Buckhead, Georgia and included over 615 attendees and 130 presenters from around the world. The three day conference, held at the beautiful Intercontinental Hotel, was one of the most successful yet and included 90 breakout sessions focusing on a variety of legal, medical, family/caregiver and prevention issues.
The theme of the conference was centered on addressing some of the created controversy that has proliferated in the media and in the courtrooms surrounding the diagnosis of SBS/AHT. Dr. Ross Cheit, professor of political science and public policy at Brown University; Brian Holmgren, Deputy District Attorney General for Davidson County, Tennessee; Charles Gill and William Bright, Connecticut Superior Court Judges; and Dr. Robert Block, President of the American Academy of Pediatrics, all gave exceptional keynote presentations addressing the unsubstantiated alternative hypothesis and courtroom tactics used by a select few highly paid defense expert witnesses who falsely claims that SBS/AHT is a "made up diagnosis."
There were also dozens of breakout sessions with specific focuses on varying aspects of the created controversy as well as many other exceptional presentations addressing other medical, legal, therapeutic, and prevention advances for SBS/AHT.
The generous support of the Office for Victims of Crime, Matty Eappen Foundation and Sarah Jane Brain Foundation made it possible for the NCSBS to provide 28 scholarships to victims of SBS/AHT and their families who desperately seek and need information about coping strategies, therapies, resources and special needs care available in the wake of a shaking incident.
The NCSBS would like to extend a special thanks to the conference planning committee, volunteers, staff, boards and many others who helped make the Eleventh International Conference a tremendous success. We have already begun planning the next international conference which is scheduled for September 29, 30 and October 1, 2012 in Boston, Massachusetts. More information for the 2012 conference is available on the NCSBS website, www.dontshake.org, including presenters, accommodations and registrations forms. We hope to see you there!
National Center Moves Headquarters
The NCSBS moves to a beautiful growing community just outside Salt Lake City, Utah
For nearly 15 years the National Center on Shaken Baby Syndrome (NCSBS) called the American Red Cross building in Ogden, Utah home. Although national scope, in the beginning many of the programs and services the NCSBS provided were to the local community. However, In July of 2000 the NCSBS incorporated and began offering programs and services throughout North America. Every year since, the NCSBS has vastly increased the number of families and organizations we serve throughout the country. Throughout this expansion, the NCSBS staff and our need for space continually increased to a point where it became necessary to seek out a larger, more modern and centrally located office building.
On February 14, 2011 the National Center moved our operations from Ogden to fifteen minutes outside downtown Salt Lake City in Farmington, Utah. The new offices are located in a beautiful growing community in the heart of the Wasatch Front and have plenty of room for the NCSBS to grow and expand in the coming years. The NCSBS is now more centrally located to Salt Lake City, making it much more convenient for our partners, donors and others to visit our offices.
The NCSBS would like to extend a special thanks to the Dr. W.C. Swanson Family Foundation who has been hugely supportive of the NCSBS since the beginning and provided for many years a wonderful facility for the NCSBS to do business out of.
The NCSBS is thrilled about our move to Farmington and look forward to continued growth as we expand our efforts to prevent shaken baby syndrome/abusive head trauma throughout North America.
NCSBS Receives Two Year Grant from Doris Duke Charitable Foundation
Funding will provide assistance to prepare for more widespread dissemination of the evidence based Period of PURPLE Crying program throughout North America.
The Doris Duke Charitable Foundation, one of the largest private foundations in America, has been a longtime partner of the National Center on Shaken Baby Syndrome (NCSBS), investing millions into the development and research of the NCSBS’s evidence-based infant abuse prevention program, the Period of PURPLE Crying.
In 2007, the NCSBS began offering the PURPLE program to the public and at the same time began a five year research project in North Carolina (2007-2012), funded by the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation, to evaluate the program’s effectiveness to reduce the incidence of abuse in that state.
The NCSBS has seen an impressive uptake of the PURPLE program in jurisdictions throughout North America. In anticipation of the five year evaluation project coming to an end and in an effort to build on the current momentum, the NCSBS wanted to begin to formulate a strategy for more widespread dissemination of the program.
In September 2010, the NCSBS applied for and was awarded a two year grant from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation to do exactly that. In the coming years, the NCSBS will use the new grant to develop the necessary tools and resources, build capacity, and form partnerships and alliances with key organizations throughout the country to expand the implementation of the PURPLE program.
Key elements of the two year project include the production of a new complementary film to the Period of PURPLE Crying which addresses infant soothing, including coping with failed soothing, and also the re-design of the NCSBS’s online training system. At the end of the two year project, the NCSBS expects to have a strategy in place for continued expansion of the PURPLE program throughout North America.
NCSBS Launches New National Grassroots Public Education initiative
Knitters, crocheters and crafters across North America are being invited to help prevent infant abuse.
In April, the NCSBS launched a new national campaign to create awareness about the Period of PURPLE Crying. The campaign called Click for Babies: Period of PURPLE Crying Caps, is a grassroots initiative which involves partnering with knitters, crocheters and crafters throughout North America to make thousands of purple colored baby caps. The caps are being collected and then distributed to birthing hospitals and public health offices to give to babies born in November along with the Period of PURPLE Crying program.
The Click for Babies campaign was born out of separate campaigns that were launched the previous year in North Carolina and British Columbia that proved to be hugely successful in terms of creating awareness about the Period of PURPLE Crying and fostering goodwill toward the program. The inaugural Click for Babies campaign was launched in April 2011 to coincide with Child Abuse Prevention Month. Seven U.S. states (WA, OR, UT, KS, IA, NC, ME) and two Canadian provinces (BC and Ontario) were invited to join the first campaign because of their commitment and progress toward implementing the PURPLE program jurisdiction wide. It is expected that additional jurisdictions will be invited to join in the coming years. Organizers in each of the different jurisdictions are promoting the campaign and recruiting knitters with a goal of collecting a combined total of 25,000-30,000 purple caps.
Financial Overview
Revenue
| Educational Materials | $1,306,075.00 | 65% | |
| Conference and Services | $186,886.00 | 9% | |
| Program Support | $67,642.00 | 3% | |
| Donated Materials and Services | $46,550.00 | 65% | |
| Net Assets Released from Restriction | $316,977.00 | 9% | |
| Interest and Investment Income | $94,918.00 | 5% | |
| Loss on Disposal of Fixed Assets | -$1,107.00 | ||
| Total | $2,017,941.00 |
Expenses
| Programs and Services | $1,598,658.00 | 88% | |
| Fundraising | $56,130.00 | 3% | |
| General and Administrative | $166,390.00 | 9% | |
| Total | $1,821,178.00 |
Temporarily Restricted Net Assets
| Revenue and Support: | |
| Grants, Foundation and Public Support | $422,941.00 |
| Investment Income | $111.00 |
| Net Assets Released from Restrictions | (316,977) |
| Increase in Temporarily Restricted Net Assets | $106,075.00 |
| Increase in Net Assets | $302,838.00 |
| Net Assets, Beginning of Year | $913,026.00 |
| Net Assets, End of Year | $1,215,864.00 |
Donors
Gifts to $99.00
| Shervin Afrashteh Shana Aguilar Cheri Aldrich Michael Alexander Joshua Alley Marc, Jane, Katie & Sarah Althen Sharon Anderson Joanie Aponte* Savila Asad* Kim Ashcraft James & Wendy Aurich Deb Badger* Alexis Bailey Brian Bailey Lisa Bailey Bill and Shirl Lynne Barnes* George Knapp & Elizabeth Barnes Robin Beaudoin Brian Bellio Craig Bielik Scott Biser Lauren Blaha Cathy & Mick Blauer Joshua Boozer David Borchardt Kathy Bower Bonnie Bowers* Terry Bradley Jill Bradshaw Ms. Michelle Braithwaite Leslie Brattin-Stinger* Kathleen Brennaman Heather Brooks Celia Brown Larry Brown Melissa Brundage Kimberly Buck* Roger Burke* Mark Burt Glen and Deby Burton Jessica Butterfield Beverly Byron Shannon Call Richard and Rosie Campbell Scott and Kellie Campbell* Lynn Canesso* Nichole Cassese* Stacie Chadwick Diane Chatwin Church Hill Elementary School Alan Clifford* Dana Conroy* Ben Coons Patrick Coons Niki Cooper Luis Cortes Julie Costello James Cottrill Country Builders, Inc. Sophie Crew Jenn Senecal Dawson Maddalena De Nicola Colleen DeAngelo* Aaron Degroff Ismael Delgado Samantha Demaree Patrick Donohue Alla Dudelzak Danita Edwards Kirk Edwards Joseph Esquibel Terri Ethington Denise Feeney* Betty J. Flint Savina Foglia Brandon Freeman* Froerer & Miles, P.C. Joseph and Erma Fusco Phoebe Galloway Richard Galloway Ralph Gandolfo Jean Gandy Andrew Gardtner Gregory & Caitlin Gochnour* Shirley Goddard Devin Gongora Magda Gonzalez* Good Search Leah Graves* Thomas Jason Greene Kay & Tom III Greyhard Stephanie Guillou |
Steward & Marie Gulian Brent & Carol Hadley Robert & Laurie Hall Kyle Hammond* Brittany Hanamaikai Ted & Cathy Hanchett Courtney Harris* Betty J. Hastings Beth Hawkins Amy Haynes* Deanna Hebert Justin Heinonen Amanda Helton Julia Henderson* Erica High High Tech Diesel Repair Alice Hileman John Hinds* George Hoffman Rosemary Hoffman* Lisa & Betty Holland Donald & Susan Hopper Jacqueline Huber Travis and Michele Hughes L.L. & A.H. Janssen Amber Jennings Pamela Johnson* Dorothy Jones Mark, Vicki, Emily Jones Keerthi Kanubaddi Ashley Kellum Lauren Key Jan Kindig Melanie Klomp Karl Koester Kyle & Robin Kroening Lee Ksepka Brie Lancaster Trevor Langrehr Brian Lapthorn Robert and Rachael Larson* Shawn Lear* Julius Ledgett Susan Leonard Brandi Lierd* Carol Liptrot Brian Lopez* Dylan Lovan Martin and Kimberly Lovato Lugoff Elementary School Janet Lyon Allyn and Mark Malan* Donna Maloney Jessica Mancini Neil Manning Cynthia Marcelletti* Joseph & Deborah Mastalski Emily S Mathews Gina Maughan* Jeri Maughan Mark Mayberry Joseph & Victoria Mcgirr Dot & Phil Mench Martin Merx William C. & Kayleen B. Merx Ryan Messer Krystal Miller Missionfish Kelly Moore Amanda Nelson Cora Nelson Jeanette Newton* Northwestern Autobody Miko Nunokawa Kathleen O'linn* Margaret Ochs Ogden Stamp Company* Abby Oringer Angie Ostrander Carol Pack Mrs. Sandy Pagano* Kristen Palmieri Dr. Michael Palumbo* Jeannette Parish Steven and Linda Parke* Tom Parke Jay Payne Seaandra Pearson Mindi Petersen Penny and Larry Phillips* Donnie Pickle |
Howard and Cynthia Piper Miss Ariel Poldervaart* Julie Price* Thomas Priest* Paul Raffaelli* Donna Jean Raftesceth Nena Ray Amy Raymond* Amanda Rennells Barbara Ricks Dr. Juan J. Rios Collazo Carolyn Ross* Sarah Rounkles Tim Sandlin Patty Sarnowski* Katie Schlossberg Michael Schmitz Danielle Schwager* Peter Sciara* Maria Scopone Cary Scott Kerry Scott Candadai Seshachari Misty Shaffer Catherine Sharpsteen* Ms Debbie Shatto* Meena Sheehan Bryce Sheen* Robyn Sheridan Jessica Silva Curtis and Patricia Singleton* Douglas Smith Lindsey Smith* Tina Smith* Jigisha Smolinsky Emily Snow* Richard Sorensen* Thomas and Judith Soulsby Spivey Insurance Group* Robert Springston Ryan Steinbeigle* Brian & Cher Stillings Lynne Stone David & Jodi Strack Gregory Straub Rachel Sumner Steve and Tamee Sutherland Jackie Sweet The Arc of Lake Cumberland Jason Thomas Kimberly Tomko Ashley Toothman Angela & Noel Torres Ben Trentelman* Carla Trentelman* Mr Charles Trentelman* Karen Trentelman* Donald Trottier* Katherine Trottier* Leslie Trottier* Lisa Tucker* Louis and Gloria Turner Patricia and Dwight Turner* Mr Scott Unrein* Utah Idaho Supply/Map World Fred Van Ess Danielle Vazquez* Louise C. Voigts Katherine Walsh Emily Wapple Doris R. Ward Morgan Ward Kathy Watercutter J. Paul and Caroline Weight Dennis and Linda Wells* Don White* Christine Whitt* Amy Wicks Doris Wicks* John and Myra Williams* Laurie Wilson Wine Shipping LLC Carolyn Wold* Carolyn and James Wold* Ms. Jill Wolfe Marti Woolford* Dr Gloria Wurst* Grace Yang Aleisa Yusko Rick and Susan Zampedri* Fran Zedney* Curtis Zerr |
Gifts $100.00-$499.00
| Ellen Pall Access Communications* American Academy of Pediatrics Ashley Anderson* Anonymous Donations* Randy Armbrecht Melissa Bachochin Bank of the West Employee Giving Program Tom and Maxine Barber Kathy Bergling Charles & Susan Broman Jodi Brown Edward and Kathleen Byrne* CarePartners Foundation Challenger Middle School Deborah and Edward Conway, Jr. M.D. Jacob Coons Rebecca & Jason Crouse Cyber Alert Student Association Fund D.C Everest Senior High School Kevin Daley Digital Bytes Anita Dutson Nicki Eger Debra Esernio Jenssen Richard & Karen Fairbanks Jon Fishpaw Flip4Mac by Telestream Joyce Frasier* Lori Frasier Friends of the Henderson County Public Library |
Judy Goddard Leslie Golub Dan Graziano Jay & Heidi Hadley* Donald & Donna Halffield Joseph Hansen Harmons Julie Harris* Jerry Hawkins Charles Hobbs Bryan & Lisa Hoelzer Mr and Mrs Nathan Hoyle Hoyle Amy-Sue Hum Joan and Keith Hunt Anthony Johnson Unjoo Johnson Kristin Kahler David and Lori Kennedy Rachel Kibbey Kimberly-Clark Jeanine Kokot Lenox Township Firefighters Association Sharon Lewis Sue Lloyd Debra McDonald Meyers Family Nadia Monroe* Jeff Moore National Shaken Baby Coalition Network For Good* |
Allen Neu Dee Ann Nye* Ogden City Schools, Adult Transition Program Von and Sherri Orgill Phyllis and Pat Patrick Donna Roberts* Marcy Rubin Scott & Ellen Sandberg Clay and Sherri Sayger Robert O. and Betty Sayger Daniel Schroeder* Richard Schubert Sigma Omega Phi, Delta Chapter South Carolina Medical Association Alliance Cathleen & Randy Sparrow John & Cathy Strong Ella Sucher Tahitian NONI International Tech Soup Tesch Landscaping, LLC The Village Preschool David and Ruth Toller United Way of Salt Lake Erica Voss* Walmart #2207 Randy Watt Wendy Wehunt Dorothy Wood* Terri Yeckley* Sandra Zetley* |
Gifts $500.00- $999.00
| Sandra Alexander* Aspen Duplication & Fulfillment Services Marilyn Barr* Danielle Croyle Davis Hospital & Medical Center Tim and Candace Dee Mr. and Mrs. Pepe Fanjul Granite Construction Company Larry and Jean Hulett* Indian Oaks Academy/Safe Harbor School Just Give |
Nolan Karras Kennecott Utah Copper Charitable Foundation Karen Leonardi Mr and Mrs Paul Leone Blanton and Ellen McDonald NACHAS Unlimited* Amanda Papa Lisa and Frank Peirce* Podango |
Philip Schweigert* Wilbur & Rebecca Smith* Kathryn Turner United Way of Southeastern Pennsylvania* James and Vickie Urry Wally & Jo Strobel Foundation Walmart Supercenter Store #2511* Jeri Wells Cosmo Young* |
Gifts $1,000.00-$4,999.00
| Randell Alexander Alzheimer's Community Center Tom and Lisa Beard Dr. Robert Block* Carr Printing* Mary Case* Citigroup Foundation Matching Gifts Program Judge Roger Dutson Melanie Eckert Edith Dee Green Foundation Fringe Benefit Analysts Carolyn Goddard Graham Consulting, Ltd.* Mary & George Hall Roger and Denise Hatton |
Brian Holmgren* Iasis Health Care Junior E. and Blanche B. Rich Foundation Luna Webs* Matty Eappen Foundation McKay Dee Hospital Employee Council Jill Moore* Neutek Print PASCO* Michele and Rodney Poole* Primary Children's Medical Center Rocky Mountain Power* Sam's Club #4786 Sam's Club #6684 Sam's Club #6686 |
Maxine Shreeve St. Joseph's Episcopal School Target Foundation Angela & Gregory Tipton United Way of Northern Utah* Walmart Neighborhood Store #5205 Walmart Store #1888 Walmart Store #5120 Walmart Supercenter #3220 Walmart Supercenter #3366 Walmart Supercenter #5234 Walmart Supercenter Store #1686 Walmart Supercenter Store #3848 |
Gifts $5,000.00-$9,999.00
| Alcoa Foundation Ashton Family Foundation* Dr. Ron Barr* Christopher and Dana Reeve Foundation Morgan Family: Tyler, Aaron, Hannah, and Ross* Office for Victims of Crime* R. Harold Burton Foundation Dr. Robert Reece* Sarah Jane Brain Project Sterling & Shelli Gardner Foundation* |
Gifts $10,000.00-$24,999.00
| BC Children's Hospital Foundation Crossaction Computer Specialists* Fraser Health Acquired Brain Injury Program Larry H. Miller Charities Lawrence T. and Janet T. Dee Foundation* Maine Children's Trust Fund Ministry of Children and Family Development Ministry of Health Rite Aid Foundation Southeast Mechanical Contractors W Bradford Ingalls Charitable Foundation |
Gifts over $25,000.00
| Doris Duke Charitable Foundation* Dr. W.C. Swanson Family Foundation* George S. & Dolores Doré Eccles Foundation* Humana, Inc. Intermountain Healthcare Foundation James & Co. - Business Advisors* Stephen G. and Susan E. Denkers Family Foundation Willard L. Eccles Foundation |
NCSBS Emphasizes the Importance of Social Media Engaging with people via social media is a hugely important mechanism for spreading awareness.
Engaging with people via social media is a hugely importance mechanism for spreading awareness.
Follow me on Facebook. Send me a tweet. Did you see that video on YouTube? Look what I found on Pinterest. Social media has become ingrained into the daily interactions we have with people. When someone wants to learn more or share their opinions about a particular topic, product or organization or share information about exciting events in their life and see what’s happening in others, one of the first places people turn is social media.
The importance of social media in the 21st century can best be described from a comment made by a public relations and social media expert at Limelite PR in British Columbia, "Ignoring and refusing to engage with people via social media is the equivalent of someone picking up the phone to call your organization, and you the organization, choosing not to answer."
This past year the NCSBS embraced social media and is using it as a mechanism to spread awareness about the dangers of shaking and abusing an infant to literally millions of people who use social media every day. The NCSBS has two pages on Facebook and on Twitter. A page has been set up on both social media sites specifically for the NCSBS, which focuses on the broader issues of SBS/AHT, and another for our evidence-based abuse prevention program, the Period of PURPLE Crying. The NCSBS also has a YouTube and Flickr page where we share photos and videos from various campaigns and events. If you haven’t already, please take a minute and check out our pages below and become a friend/follower.
PURPLE Program Social Media Channels
NCSBS Social Media Channels