November 17 2010 Coalition Meeting

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Transcript of November 17 2010 Coalition Meeting

FORWARD History

August , 2008- Planning Group AssemblesFebruary, 2009- FORWARD Begins WorkMay, 2009- Advisory Board is FormedSummer, 2009- 3 committees developed:

Resource and PartnershipMarketing and CommunicationsData and Research

October, 2009- First Coalition MeetingMarch, 2010- FORWARD launched to publicJune, 2010- Grant Funding AwardedSummer , 2010- Community Assessments ConveneFall, 2010- BMI Surveillance System Launched and YMCA’s launch Core Leadership Teams

Distribution of DuPage County schools by percent of low income students

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0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 70 75 80 85 90 95Percent

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DuPage Selected Participated

Percent of Student Population that is Low Income

No. (%) of schools by Income Status

DuPage Selected Participating

Low (<16%) 123 (46%) 59 (47%) 50 (52%)

Mid (16-35%) 90 (34%) 43 (34%) 29 (30%)

High (>35%) 55 (20%) 24 (19%) 17 (17%)

FORWARD Data Collection Phase II:

• Further analyze these data• Collect data from 90% of all DuPage County Schools in 2011-2012 school year• CHILI data collection in 32 municipalities

FitTrac• Created by Bill Casey, a Physical Education Teacher and Founder of YourLink• Donated to FORWARD by the Regional Office Of Education• Adopted and Modified by FORWARD with a grant from JR Albert Foundation

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ACTIVATE AMERICA ®

Activate America® is the YMCA’s response to the nation’s growing health crisis. Our mission compels us to transform the way we work, both internally and externally, to support all Health Seekers and communities in their pursuit of well-being in spirit, mind and body.

Develop community and state level policy & environmental change strategies

Raise awareness and strengthen the framework for community-wide and national movements to reverse the trends in physical inactivity, poor nutrition, and chronic conditions

Strengthen community capacity to initiate and sustain promising practices for healthy communities;

PHC Goals

Utilize mechanisms and strategies to transform healthy community principles into practice;

Identify cost-effective, practical, and sustainable solutions and tools to educate and mobilize communities and

Build complementary community, state and national efforts for physical activity and healthy eating

PHC Goals

SocialService

Faith

Edu-cation

Bus

Healthcare

FORWARD

/PHC

Central-East Region

South-East Region

South-West

Region

North-West

Region

North-East Region

Core Leadership

Teams

Childhood obesity rates in Kane County

1 out of every 6 or 16% of all Kane County children and adolescents are obese 30% to 46% of our children and adolescents who are from low income families and are African-American and Latino are obese

Kane County

Campaign to reverse the epidemic of childhood obesity in Kane County

November 2007- Announced plans for campaign

Spring 2008- Held kick-off event

Summer 2008- Formed FFK Funder’s Consortium

Fall 2008- Released competitive request for proposals

Fall 2008- Released request for proposals

Spring 2009 Fit for Kids grants fundedImplementation grant for Activate ElginPlanning grants awarded to: Aurora Healthy Living Council & Delnor Fit 4Kane

January 2010-RWJF Funding Received funding from Robert Wood Johnson Foundation as part of Healthy Kids Healthy Communities Initiative. Working in partnership with Kane County Development Department.

February 2010- Fit for Kids Leadership Summit

March 2010- 9 Sector Specific Workgroups Formed to determine policy level strategies and action steps

November 2010-Preview of Fits Kids 2020 Released

January 2011-Fit Kids 2020 Plan presented

November 2011-Fit Kids 2020 Plan incorporated into Kane County 2040; Smart Growth is Healthy Living Plan

Sector Specific Workgroups Healthcare and Medicine Mobility Recreation and Lifestyle Food System Family, Culture and Community Schools and Education Faith Community Economic Strength Built and Natural Environment

Over the next 10 years, how will your sector:Increase physical activity & decrease sedentary habitsIncrease access and consumption of fruits/vegetables & decrease consumption of unhealthy foods

Determine policy level strategies & action steps

Local EffortLocal ability to address local needsEngaging local stakeholders Creating a base of committed community members and

partnerships to carry out Fit Kids 2020 PlanCoordination of multiple effortsCentralized technical support & sharing of ideasLeveraging local resources to attract additional outside

funding to help Kane County residents

Planning;Fit Kids 2020 Plan

Implementation;Community GardensWalk to School Day

46 Kane County Schools representing

8 of the 9 school districts participated

International Walk to School

Day

Gardening SummaryOver 1000 community plots for lease in the county new plots in Aurora, Geneva, Batavia

Gardens at 3 Public Housing Complexes

Private and public partnerships

Increase in partners donating to the NIFB and local pantries

Over 50 directly engaged garden partners 2 Hospitals 5 Churches 2 Schools 26 Farmers

The Problem

• Rising rates of chronic diseases/ conditions, including obesity

• Actual causes of death

• Lack of prevention $

• Unequal socioeconomics, leading to health inequities

• Geopolitical complexity of suburban Cook County

The Solution:Medical Care Alone Cannot Improve Health

• Not the primary determinant of health

• Treats one person at a time

• Often comes late; can’t always restore health

Alliance for Healthy & Active Communities

• A collaborative led by CCDPH, formed in Summer 2009

• Brings together a diverse group of partners

Turning the Tide on the Obesity Epidemic:Communities Putting Prevention to Work

a partnership project of theCook County Department of Public Health and

the Public Health Institute of Metropolitan Chicago

Communities Putting Prevention to Work

• Nearly 16 million dollars was awarded for obesity prevention

• Fiscal management through Public Health Institute of Metropolitan Chicago

• Aimed at broad-based policy change that shapes the nutrition, physical activity landscape

Policy Agenda to TransformSuburban Cook County

Policy Agenda

• Promotes broad-based policy changes at state, county and local levels

• Focuses on promoting breastfeeding; enhancing school environments; and building healthier communities; addresses barriers to obesity prevention

• Requires broad-based collaborations

State-Level Action

• Explore feasibility of increasing price of unhealthy food/drink

• Support establishment of Illinois Fresh Food Fund

• Promote breastfeeding- Illinois Hospital Report Card- Referral systems that promote/support breastfeeding - Reimbursement of breastfeeding support

and promotion by health insurance payers

County-Level Action

• Establish a suburban Cook County Food Council• Modify nutritional standards for vending machines

in Cook County Government buildings • Advance implementation of Complete Streets (for

County Highway networks)• Institutionalize non-motorized planning within Cook

County Government• (Regional) Create/Update Sub-Regional Bike/Walking

Plans• (Regional) Include healthy/PA impacts as a criteria in

at least 1 regionally administered transportation funding program (e.g., CMAQ)

Local Action: Model Communities

• Aims to transform communities and school environments that support health eating, active living– Supports “proven” strategies– Key themes are policy, systems and

environmental change; reducing health inequities; and creating collaborations/coalitions

– Provision of financial and technical resources

Sustainable Impact

Long-term Results

A constituency base that can be engaged to support advocacy efforts

On-going initiatives that continue to build local capacity to advance change (e.g., continued community access to on-line platform with access to trainings, evidence-based info, etc.)

Systems of coordination & communication

Health in All Policies Co-benefits @ Federal, State, Local

Policy Alignment

Leadership for Healthy Communities

• What we know• What we are doing• What lies ahead

Presentation Outline

What we know

White House Task Force on Childhood Obesity

Obese children and adolescents are more likely to develop chronic conditions when they are young, and are more likely to be obese as adultsObesity may reduce the life expectancy of today’s generation of children and diminish their overall quality of their lives

Illinois has the 27th highest rate of adult obesity in the nation, at 25.9 percent and the 10th highest of overweight youths (ages 10-17) at 34.9 percent, …Source: Trust for America's Health’s ‘F as in Fat 2009’ – July 2009

…and Chicago kindergarten-aged children are over weight at more than twice the national rateSource: 2003 CLOCC Annual Report

Child Overweight, 2003-2004

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5%

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25%

30%

National Chicago National Illinois Chicago

Three KeyFood DesertsIn Chicago

Sponsored by LaSalle BankCopyright and authorship:

Commute to Grocery

Fast/Fried Food > 4 Times a Weekand Obese

Percent of Adults Who Are Obese

Percent of Children (2-12 yrs) Who Are Overweight and Obese

What we are doing

Local Government Actions to Prevent Childhood Obesity

Goal 1: Improve access to and consumption of healthy, safe, and affordable foods.

•Increase community access to healthy •Promote efforts to provide fruits and vegetables•Ensure that publicly-run entities implement policies and practices to promote healthy foods and beverages •Encourage breastfeeding

Communities Putting Prevention to Work

Improve access to healthy food and safe opportunities for physical activityImplement policy and environmental change strategiesConduct a public media campaignImplement point-of-purchase strategiesPromote breast-feedingPromote the use of public transportation

1. Chicago Department of Public Health (lead agency) 2. Chicago Department of Environment3. Chicago Department of Family and Support Services

– Children Services Division, – Youth Services Division, and – Senior Services Area Agency on Aging

4. Chicago Department of Transportation5. Chicago Department of Zoning and Land Use Planning6. Chicago Housing Authority7. Chicago Park District8. Chicago Police Department9. Chicago Public Schools10. Chicago Transit Authority11. Mayor’s Office for People with Disabilities

Inter-Departmental Task Force onChildhood Obesity

IDTF Plan At A Glance: A

Phased and Tiered Approach

Tier 3:Wellness Campus

Activities for10,000At-Risk

Preschoolers

750,000 Chicago Children

130,000Children Age 3-5

Tier 2:Early Childhood

Focused Activities

Tier 1:Primary Prevention Activities Tier 1: Primary Prevention

Activities

Tier 2: Early Childhood Focused Activities

Tier 3: Wellness Campus Activities

IDTF AccomplishmentsTier 1: Primary Prevention Activities

Tier 2: Early Childhood Focused Activities

Tier 3: Wellness Campus Activities

October 2009 IDTF participates in citywide healthy lifestyle campaign oCTA – All buses and trains oCDPH – 30 JCDecaux bus shelters oCPS – Message mailed to 453,000 studentsoCLOCC – 33 billboards

Passage of resolution to change child care standardsCLOCC received $150,000 evaluation grant from RWJF to evaluate changes

Abbott funding of 2 Park District Wellness CentersCLOCC evaluation found increased physical activity levels among children in Wellness Center program Blue Cross/Blue Shield will fund 4 more

Chicago Park District Wellness Centers

What lies ahead

Where do we start?• "The first thing to do is to recognize that there's

a problem, and to see that maybe it didn't start at age 4 or 5, or 6 or 7, but maybe before then,"

• "The longer you're overweight, the more likely it is that you're going to be overweight as an adult."

“HOW MUCH DID I WEIGH WHEN MY WEIGHT PROBLEMS BEGAN? 7 LBS. 9 OZ.”

Dr. John Harrington, Associate Professor of Pediatrics at Eastern Virginia Medical School and Children's Hospital of The King's Daughters

Bending the Curve

The success or failure of any government in the final analysis must be measured by the well-being of its citizens. Nothing can be more important to a state than its public health; the states paramount concern should

be the health of its people.

Franklin Delanor Roosevelt 1932

Lake County

Lake County Health Department / Community Health Center

Lake County At a Glance

Lake County has 52 municipalities and approximately 715,000 citizens. The vision of the Lake County Health Department is to engage with the entire county.

Lake County Health Department / Community Health Center

Initial Assessment of the Problem

Synthetic estimate for Lake County – Students from ages 12-19 years old: 21.2% are at or above the 85th percentile (Overweight or Obese). This strongly contrasts with the Healthy People 2010 standard of 5.0%.

Lake County Health Department / Community Health Center

Connecting with our Schools

Lake County has approximately 48 public school districts and 223 public schools. There are approximately 75 certified school nurses in the Lake County School Nurses Association. These are valued and strategic alliances with whom we are looking forward to partnering.

Lake County Health Department / Community Health Center

Assessing Rules about Physical Educationin our Schools

•Do the rules vary from district to district?•How many PE teachers are there in our County?•What programs/districts/schools are doing well with fitness and PE?

Lake County Health Department / Community Health Center

Assessing Regulations/Standards Regarding School Nutrition

•What kind of food is being served?•How many vending machines are in our schools? What types of foods/drinks are in them?•What are the standards regarding Health Education?•What programs/districts/schools are doing well with Nutrition and Health Ed?

Lake County Health Department / Community Health Center

Potential Community Partners

Lake County School Nurse AssociationRegional Office of Education – Superintendent of SchoolsIllinois Association for Health, Physical Education, Recreation, and DanceWe Can! - 2 sites in Lake CountyIllinois Dietetic AssociationChildren’s Health Center – private pediatric medical practice Northwestern Lake Forest HospitalAdvocate Condell Medical CenterRosalind Franklin University / Nutrition programYMCA of Lake CountyChildServUnited WayNorthern Illinois Food BankLake County Forest PreserveCorporate PartnersFaith Communities

Lake County Health Department / Community Health Center

Our Strategic Approach

Lake County Health Department / Community Health Center

Our first County-wide Community Forum

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Lake County Health Department / Community Health Center

We’re grateful for all of these new partnerships with all of you. And we are grateful for the team that we have at the Lake County Health Department: Irene Pierce, Executive DirectorMark Pfister, Director of Population Health ServicesPat Donald, Associate Director

of Population Health Services

Northern Illinois Regional Forum

What is the Illinois Alliance to Prevent Obesity?

The Illinois Alliance to Prevent Obesity (IAPO) is a statewide coalition comprised of a broad range of stakeholders working for

a state-level response to the obesity epidemic.

The IAPO works to shape and advance solutions to reverse dangerous obesity trends.

IAPO supporters believe that Illinois must respond to the obesity epidemic by developing coordinated systems, policy

improvements and investment on the scale of the problem.

This initiative was launched and is coordinated by the Illinois Public Health Institute (IPHI). To learn more about the Illinois Alliance to Prevent Obesity,

please visit www.preventobesityil.org.

Statement of Support Illinois is experiencing an epidemic of obesity, contributing to

increased rates of costly and debilitating chronic disease. We need regular and reliable information about the state of

obesity in Illinois to understand where action is needed the most.

Local, collaborative initiatives exist and are demonstrating how to make an impact on the problem, but inadequate funding means they are limited in scope, with limited capacity for evaluation and expansion to scale.

There’s growing national consensus on effective strategies to combat obesity which are not currently employed in Illinois.

A state-level response is needed. Development of coordinated systems, changes in policy and investment on the scale of the problem must be undertaken.

Illinois Alliance to Prevent ObesityApril-December 2010

Goal: To promote nutrition and physical activity policies and

interventions to reverse obesity trends in Illinois

IAPO Outcome ObjectivesApril-December 2010

1. Develop a State Obesity Action Roadmap• Organize regional forums in Cook County, Northern, Central, Eastern,

and Southern Illinois to engage stakeholders in providing feedback/input

• Synthesize ideas based on ten identified categories to improve nutrition and increase physical activity

• Convene a statewide summit on December 3, 2010 to reach consensus on the State Obesity Action Roadmap

2. Build a visible movement to reduce obesity3. Raise obesity reduction/prevention to the top of the policy

and public health agendas4. Disseminate and promote best practices and current

information (developmental)

State Obesity Action Roadmap

• Broad social changes in our environment and in the way in which we work, play, live and eat are major contributors to the obesity epidemic.

• No single agency can attack this problem alone.• Build consensus for state-level policies and

environmental changes to reverse the obesity trends.

• Identify local policies and environmental changes for communities to pursue.

• Highlight areas for coordination and collaboration.

State Obesity Action RoadmapCategories

1. Implement coordinated approaches to address the obesity epidemic that generates and maximizes resources, and supports state and community-level coordination and interventions.

2. Increase consumption of healthy food and beverages in relation to consumption of unhealthy food and beverages.

3. Promote breastfeeding.4. Increase opportunities for safe and affordable physical activity in communities.5. Increase opportunities for safe and affordable physical activity in senior centers,

schools, childcare settings and after-school programs.6. Promote safe and active transportation.7. Promote healthy and active lifestyles in workplaces.8. Promote healthy and affordable food consumption in senior centers, schools, parks,

child care centers and afterschool programs.9. Increase access to food retailers who serve or sell healthy and affordable food

options. 10. Establish a statewide health surveillance system that includes obesity indicators. 11. Increase access to comprehensive health care services.

IAPO Statewide Summit

• Statewide Summit, December 3, 2010 to reach consensus on the State Obesity Action Roadmap

• Advocate Christ Medical Center/Hope Children's Hospital at the Nurse Conference Center in Oak Lawn, IL

• Tyler Norris, Social Entrepreneur & Kevin Dedner, RWJ Center to Prevent Childhood Obesity

Get Involved! More IAPO Activities• Join the IAPO mailing list• Like IAPO on Facebook• Become a Supporting Organization• Letters to the Editor: A letter to the editor is a free and

effective way to build visibility and bring attention to the issue.

• Watch for Summit results/Obesity Action Roadmap, and sign on.

www.preventobesityil.org

What do we know…about the nature of our problems?

Healthy Cities and Communities

Current nutritional default

$$$$$

Source: Rudd Center for Food Policy - Yale

Current physical activity default

Places that have developed safe, activity-friendly environments with access to affordable fresh,

healthy foods will have healthier people.

健走社區—長榮社區 Community Experiences in Walking

Tainan Healthy City Research Centre 社區健走步道導覽圖—環繞社區中庭及公園全長 1000公尺

• Private and public impact

• Sustainability• Population

wide impact• A small amount

of money goes a long way!

WHY FOCUS ON POLICY?WHY NOT JUST START NEW

PROGRAMS?

Neighborhood Community State National

Statewide PHC Target

Pop

ulat

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Sca

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Geographic Scale

Where many

efforts are now

Individual

Single Sector

Multiple Sectors

Entire Population

POLICY CHANGE TARGET

POLICY CHANGE• A law, regulation, guideline, procedure, ordinance, rule (both formal and informal) or course of action that is adopted on a collective basis•Guides the behavior of groups and/or individuals•Ideally there should be a plan and commitment by administration to enforce the policy•This leads toward system/culture change

ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE

•A change to the environment•Affecting an individual’s propensity to engage in healthy behaviors•People may be aware of healthier choices but their environment may be prohibitive

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SYSTEMS CHANGE•A change in the way people (culture) and institutions (systems) think and behave•This type of change modifies the way “business is done” and becomes the established norm or way of doing something

•Policy, Systems and Environmental Change is too big for one group or organization•Shared Leadership•Utilize the strengths and expertise of each partner•Create a decision-making process that works•Consider traditional and non-traditional partners

ENGAGING THE COMMUNITY

Work Group Activity1. Healthcare2. Infants3. Childcare-PA/PE4. Childcare-Nutrition5. Schools-PA/PE6. Schools Nutrition7. Workplace Wellness8. Neighborhood Nutrition9. Neighborhood PA/PE10.Restaurants/Food Service

Step 1: Select a Workgroup:Step 2: Discuss the Policy ideas presented by the facilitatorStep 3: Determine the priorities for each policy:

•What is happening already that we can build on? •What’s desirable that may be more winnable?•What’s desirable that may be more challenging?•What’s feasible in your community/region that you’d like to see considered at the statewide summit?

Step 4: Come to consensus for top two priorities Report out to the group

Policy Workgroup Activity

Northern Illinois Regional Forum

PolicyWorkgroup Report

Out

The major public health problems of our time will not be solved merely by individual actions and health choices, but by individuals coming together to make our society one in which healthy choices are easy, fun and popular. Communities that focus on the latter approach will be healthier and more satisfying places to live, work, and play.”