Explore the toolkit to find resources, videos, tips and more!
Help them feel secure, help baby stay healthy and use routines
View OnlineStarting June 1, 2021 Oklahoma WIC programs are expanding the fruits and vegetables offered to include shelf stable options.
Watch the VideoYou can purchase any variety of fresh or frozen fruits or vegetables as long as a fruit or vegetable is listed as the first ingredient
Watch the VideoChickasaw Nation WIC VirtualNutrition Education Schedule
View OnlinePacked Promise Now Accepting Applications Packed Promise is a home food delivery service for Chickasaw students which provides a month’s worth of shelf-stable breakfast and lunch meals. The food benefits increase food access, food security and diet quality for children ages 4-18. To be eligible, participants must be students in pre-K through grade 12 and must qualify for free or reduced-cost school meals. Participants must also reside within Chickasaw Nation boundaries or, eligibility has been expanded to include the following counties: • Atoka • Caddo • Canadian • Cleveland • Comanche • Cotton • Hughes • Pittsburg • Pottawatomie • Seminole One box of food per child will be delivered each month. Each box contains up to 25 pounds of shelf-stable food along with an EBT card each month to buy fresh/frozen or canned fruits and vegetables at Chickasaw Nation WIC grocery stores or farmers’ markets. For more information please visit Chickasaw.net/PackedPromise and to apply online visit PackedPromise.com.
View OnlineSocial and Emotional Development Begins Early
View OnlineDownload the app by searching for “My Oklahoma WIC" in the App Store or Google Play.
View OnlineThe app is now available to download from the App Store and Google Play!
View OnlineGood attachment will help a baby get more milk and make breastfeeding more comfortable. This video shows why good attachment is so important to breastfeeding success and how to help mothers deeply attach the baby to the breast.
View OnlineGet medical care right away if you experience any of the following symptoms:
View OnlineAre you a grandparent or other relative raising another family member’s children? You are not alone. Relatives are raising more than two million children whose parents cannot care for them.
View OnlineThe GrandFacts state fact sheets for grandfamilies include state-specific data and programs as well as information about public benefits, educational assistance, legal relationship options and state laws. Visit www.grandfamilies.org to find this and all GrandFacts state fact sheets
View OnlineWIC measures hemoglobin, a protein in the blood that contains iron and carries oxygen throughout the body. If your hemoglobin is low, you may feel tired or weak and may even have headaches. Children with low hemoglobin may have trouble learning. Eating a diet rich in iron can help prevent low hemoglobin or anemia.
View Online