In the Clear Creek Makerspace in Wheat Ridge, small businesses, inventors, students, and dreamers are hard at work. Kay Newman is one tenant of the space who combines it all. Dreaming, inventing and learning about how to help kids with complex medical issues.
“Their daily existence isn’t represented in their toys,” she told CBS Colorado.
CBS
So she decided to do something about it. The idea is called “kiddo ditto.” It is exactly what it sounds like. A ditto of a kiddo, dolls that have all the medical attachments some of these children have. It’s used as a means of representation for young kids who would be otherwise marginalized…
