Friday, September 28, 2012

Medicaid Autism Pilot Project Accepting Applications Monday

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(Salt Lake City) – Up to 250 Utah children will be eligible to receive treatment for their clinically-diagnosed Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) through a new Utah Department of Health (UDOH) Medicaid autism pilot program. Services will be available to a limited number of children through a Home and Community-Based waiver that was approved by the federal government earlier this week.

Applications for the program will be available beginning Monday, October 1 at www.health.utah.gov/autismwaiver.

The program will provide intensive individual support for children with ASD, as well as respite care and financial management services for their families.  Data have shown that early, intensive treatment gives children with ASD the best chance to reach their full potential.

State Rep. Ronda Rudd Menlove sponsored legislation (HB 272) during the 2012 legislative session to create the program. The state anticipates spending $4.5 million over the two-year life of the pilot project, with the federal government contributing an additional $10.5 million.

“Autism is a significant challenge in our state, and it’s not going away,” said Rep. Menlove.  “This program is a small, but wonderful, step in the right direction.  We recognize there are still thousands of families who need these services for their children.  Hopefully, what we learn from this program will help us develop a more permanent solution for them,” Menlove added.

To enroll in the program, applications must be received by Wednesday, October 31.  Applications can be submitted on-line at www.health.utah.gov/autismwaiver.  Parents can also print the application and fax or mail it.  Parents are also encouraged to sign up on the website to receive e-mail updates about the program, including information on future application periods.

Once the application period ends, UDOH staff will assign a randomly-generated ranking to each eligible applicant.  In order to ensure statewide access, program openings will be assigned geographically by local health district based on each district’s population. 

To be eligible for the program, a child must be a Utah resident with a date of birth between April 1, 2007 and October 31, 2010.  The child must also not have assets (bank accounts, trust funds, etc.) of more than $2,000 in his or her name. Unlike traditional Medicaid, a parent’s income and assets are not considered when determining the child’s eligibility.

“This is a unique opportunity to provide treatment to Utah children living with ASD that wouldn’t be possible without the excellent leadership and hard work of our Medicaid program, and the forward thinking of my fellow legislators and the Governor’s staff,” Menlove added.

# # #

Media Contact:
Tom Hudachko
UDOH Public Information Officer
(o) 801.538.6232
(m) 801.560.4649
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Thursday, September 27, 2012

Better Let Go of that Cell Phone

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Opinion: Cell Phone Health Risk?

Security concerns during the Cold War may have led to the generation of misinformation on the physiological effects of microwave radiation from mobile phones.

Natural Health News has over 100 posts about cell phone and health, use our search window to read more...
By Allan H. Frey | September 25, 2012
Recently, Congress tasked its investigative arm, the General Accountability Office (GAO), to consider the health risks of mobile phones and to report back to Congress. While a previous report published in May 2010 by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) stated that there was no evidence of increased health risk resulting from exposure to the radiofrequency (microwave) energy emitted by cell phones, the World Health Organization reported the following year that cell phone radiation may be carcinogenic. Also in 2011, the director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse published a paper in JAMA reporting that 50 minutes of cell phone use by people altered glucose metabolism in the part of the brain closest to where the cell phone antennas were located. This summer, the GAO completed the task and sent a report to Congress stating that the risks were unclear and deserved greater scrutiny from the government.
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC)  “should formally reassess and, if appropriate, change its current RF energy (microwave) exposure limit and mobile phone testing requirements related to likely usage configurations, particularly when phones are held against the body,” the GAO wrote.
The controversy over whether the technology poses a risk to human health is substantial. And while much of science could be considered controversial, what has, and is, happening in microwave research is not a routine scientific dispute. Concerns about the health risks of cell phones, confusion regarding the evidence for or against such risks, and even misinformation in the scientific literature may all be collateral damage of the Cold War between the USSR and the United States. This was a time when the use of microwave-generating equipment, such as radar, was seen by some as critical to the security of the United States, and efforts were taken to ensure that such innovations were not suppressed by findings that suggested such technology to be unsafe.
Hiding data
During the Cold War, a group at Brooks Air Force Base (AFB) was tasked with reassuring residents when the Air Force wanted to install radar (microwaves) in their neighborhood. To meet that responsibility, the Brooks group hired contractors to write Environmental Impact Statements to justify the placing of the radars—an obvious conflict of interest. Even worse, when a scientist did publish findings that might indicate a risk, Brooks selected contractors to do experiments that suggested the scientist’s research was invalid or not relevant to the safety of Air Force radar.
For example, after my colleagues and I published in 1975 that exposure to very weak microwave radiation opens the regulatory interface known as the blood brain barrier (bbb), a critical protection for the brain, the Brooks AFB group selected a contractor to supposedly replicate our experiment. For 2 years, this contractor presented data at scientific conferences stating that microwave radiation had no effect on the bbb. After much pressure from the scientific community, he finally revealed that he had not, in fact, replicated our work. We had injected dye into the femoral vein of lab rats after exposure to microwaves and observed the dye in the brain within 5 minutes. The Brooks contractor had stuck a needle into the animals’ bellies and sprayed the dye onto their intestines. Thus it is no surprise that when he looked at the brain 5 minutes later, he did not see any dye; the dye had yet to make it into the circulatory system.
Another Brooks AFB responsibility that further incentivized the spreading of misinformation was to lead a lab on a classified microwave-bio weapons program. Competition between this effort and the microwave-bio research programs undoubtedly going on in other nations at the time would explain the Brooks group’s attempts to block and discredit unclassified research in the microwave area and the subsequent publication of the results: it did not want advances in knowledge to appear in the scientific literature where the USSR could benefit from it. This is not unlike the recent uproar over whether bird flu results should be published—or even done at all—because of the fear that they may help terrorists develop biological weapons.
Stalling funding
In addition to actively suppressing results of microwave-bio research, the Brooks group also attempted to block funding for such research in the first place—and largely succeeded. For example, after we and others published the first papers in the mid- to late-’70s showing that very low intensity microwaves could open the bbb, the Department of Defense (DOD) issued a report, written by a psychologist at a Kansas Veterans Administration hospital who was neither trained nor experienced in research on the bbb, that concluded “…if a real potential for catastrophic effects exists, it would be evident from the research already reported in the literature.” (An original draft of the report also noted that “DOD funding of research evaluating the effects of microwaves on the bbb should be of low priority,” though this statement was removed before the report was released to the public.)
Largely as a consequence of this report, funding for open microwave-bio research in the United States was essentially shut down. Several months after the report was released, I requested renewal of government funding, which in part supported research on the bbb. I received a letter stating that funding would not be granted unless I dropped the bbb part of the proposal. And in a September 1981 article in Microwave News, 2 years later, the editor wrote, “Surprisingly, no new [bbb] work was reported this year.”
Even now, the recent GAO report states, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) “is the only federal agency we interviewed that is directly funding ongoing studies on health effects of RF energy (microwave radiation) from mobile phone use.” And the NIH funded only one relevant completed experiment, by an in-house researcher, during the time the GAO did its assessment. For many years now most of the published microwave research—what little that has been done—has been conducted in other countries. And as I noted in a recent paper, many, if not most, of those have been epidemiological studies looking for health problems associated with outdated technologies that are not relevant to the phones used today or that will be used in the future.
Thus, the shutdown of normal open microwave research in the U.S. and the misinformation placed in the literature appears to be collateral damage of the actions of people who saw themselves as fighting a war. And since the research was not allowed to proceed in the normal fashion, we don’t have the set of data needed to determine if there is a health hazard of mobile phone use—and, if so, how serious the hazard is.  This suppression of research has now made hundreds of millions of people subjects in a grand experiment that may involve their health, without their informed consent, and the outcome of which can have substantial medical, legal, and economic consequences.
Allan H. Frey (allan@freys.us) is a semi-retired scientist in Potomac, Maryland, who was Technical Director of Randomline, Inc., a consulting and research firm. Read about more unsavory actions that I and others have observed in my chapter of bioethicist Nicholas Steneck’sRisk Benefit Analysis: The Microwave Case.

SOURCE:  http://the-scientist.com/2012/09/25/opinion-cell-phone-health-risk/
Continue reading →

Better Let Go of that Cell Phone

0 comments

Opinion: Cell Phone Health Risk?

Security concerns during the Cold War may have led to the generation of misinformation on the physiological effects of microwave radiation from mobile phones.

Natural Health News has over 100 posts about cell phone and health, use our search window to read more...
By Allan H. Frey | September 25, 2012
Recently, Congress tasked its investigative arm, the General Accountability Office (GAO), to consider the health risks of mobile phones and to report back to Congress. While a previous report published in May 2010 by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) stated that there was no evidence of increased health risk resulting from exposure to the radiofrequency (microwave) energy emitted by cell phones, the World Health Organization reported the following year that cell phone radiation may be carcinogenic. Also in 2011, the director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse published a paper in JAMA reporting that 50 minutes of cell phone use by people altered glucose metabolism in the part of the brain closest to where the cell phone antennas were located. This summer, the GAO completed the task and sent a report to Congress stating that the risks were unclear and deserved greater scrutiny from the government.
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC)  “should formally reassess and, if appropriate, change its current RF energy (microwave) exposure limit and mobile phone testing requirements related to likely usage configurations, particularly when phones are held against the body,” the GAO wrote.
The controversy over whether the technology poses a risk to human health is substantial. And while much of science could be considered controversial, what has, and is, happening in microwave research is not a routine scientific dispute. Concerns about the health risks of cell phones, confusion regarding the evidence for or against such risks, and even misinformation in the scientific literature may all be collateral damage of the Cold War between the USSR and the United States. This was a time when the use of microwave-generating equipment, such as radar, was seen by some as critical to the security of the United States, and efforts were taken to ensure that such innovations were not suppressed by findings that suggested such technology to be unsafe.
Hiding data
During the Cold War, a group at Brooks Air Force Base (AFB) was tasked with reassuring residents when the Air Force wanted to install radar (microwaves) in their neighborhood. To meet that responsibility, the Brooks group hired contractors to write Environmental Impact Statements to justify the placing of the radars—an obvious conflict of interest. Even worse, when a scientist did publish findings that might indicate a risk, Brooks selected contractors to do experiments that suggested the scientist’s research was invalid or not relevant to the safety of Air Force radar.
For example, after my colleagues and I published in 1975 that exposure to very weak microwave radiation opens the regulatory interface known as the blood brain barrier (bbb), a critical protection for the brain, the Brooks AFB group selected a contractor to supposedly replicate our experiment. For 2 years, this contractor presented data at scientific conferences stating that microwave radiation had no effect on the bbb. After much pressure from the scientific community, he finally revealed that he had not, in fact, replicated our work. We had injected dye into the femoral vein of lab rats after exposure to microwaves and observed the dye in the brain within 5 minutes. The Brooks contractor had stuck a needle into the animals’ bellies and sprayed the dye onto their intestines. Thus it is no surprise that when he looked at the brain 5 minutes later, he did not see any dye; the dye had yet to make it into the circulatory system.
Another Brooks AFB responsibility that further incentivized the spreading of misinformation was to lead a lab on a classified microwave-bio weapons program. Competition between this effort and the microwave-bio research programs undoubtedly going on in other nations at the time would explain the Brooks group’s attempts to block and discredit unclassified research in the microwave area and the subsequent publication of the results: it did not want advances in knowledge to appear in the scientific literature where the USSR could benefit from it. This is not unlike the recent uproar over whether bird flu results should be published—or even done at all—because of the fear that they may help terrorists develop biological weapons.
Stalling funding
In addition to actively suppressing results of microwave-bio research, the Brooks group also attempted to block funding for such research in the first place—and largely succeeded. For example, after we and others published the first papers in the mid- to late-’70s showing that very low intensity microwaves could open the bbb, the Department of Defense (DOD) issued a report, written by a psychologist at a Kansas Veterans Administration hospital who was neither trained nor experienced in research on the bbb, that concluded “…if a real potential for catastrophic effects exists, it would be evident from the research already reported in the literature.” (An original draft of the report also noted that “DOD funding of research evaluating the effects of microwaves on the bbb should be of low priority,” though this statement was removed before the report was released to the public.)
Largely as a consequence of this report, funding for open microwave-bio research in the United States was essentially shut down. Several months after the report was released, I requested renewal of government funding, which in part supported research on the bbb. I received a letter stating that funding would not be granted unless I dropped the bbb part of the proposal. And in a September 1981 article in Microwave News, 2 years later, the editor wrote, “Surprisingly, no new [bbb] work was reported this year.”
Even now, the recent GAO report states, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) “is the only federal agency we interviewed that is directly funding ongoing studies on health effects of RF energy (microwave radiation) from mobile phone use.” And the NIH funded only one relevant completed experiment, by an in-house researcher, during the time the GAO did its assessment. For many years now most of the published microwave research—what little that has been done—has been conducted in other countries. And as I noted in a recent paper, many, if not most, of those have been epidemiological studies looking for health problems associated with outdated technologies that are not relevant to the phones used today or that will be used in the future.
Thus, the shutdown of normal open microwave research in the U.S. and the misinformation placed in the literature appears to be collateral damage of the actions of people who saw themselves as fighting a war. And since the research was not allowed to proceed in the normal fashion, we don’t have the set of data needed to determine if there is a health hazard of mobile phone use—and, if so, how serious the hazard is.  This suppression of research has now made hundreds of millions of people subjects in a grand experiment that may involve their health, without their informed consent, and the outcome of which can have substantial medical, legal, and economic consequences.
Allan H. Frey (allan@freys.us) is a semi-retired scientist in Potomac, Maryland, who was Technical Director of Randomline, Inc., a consulting and research firm. Read about more unsavory actions that I and others have observed in my chapter of bioethicist Nicholas Steneck’sRisk Benefit Analysis: The Microwave Case.

SOURCE:  http://the-scientist.com/2012/09/25/opinion-cell-phone-health-risk/
Continue reading →
Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Google Play hits 25 billion downloads

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Whether you’re looking for directions, checking email or sharing a picture with friends, apps are now an indispensable part of life. And if you’re using Android, it all starts with Google Play, home to 675,000 apps and games. That’s a lot of choice. We’ve now crossed 25 billion downloads from Google Play, and to celebrate we’re offering some great discounts for the next five days.


Every day you’ll be able to choose from a collection of apps from some of the world’s top developers including Gameloft, Electronic Arts, Rovio, runtastic, Full Fat and more. And all for just 25 cents. We’ll also be offering some special collections like 25 movies you must own, 25 banned books, 25 albums that changed the world and our 25 top selling magazines, all at special prices. Visit Google Play a little later today to check them out.

Twenty-five billion is more than twice the distance, in miles, that the Voyager 1 spacecraft has travelled since its launch 35 years ago. It’s the amount of time, in minutes, that have passed since some of our earliest ancestors began to set foot in Europe. And now, thanks to all of you, it’s a Google Play milestone. We look forward to the next 25 billion.

Posted by Jamie Rosenberg, Director, Digital Content
Continue reading →
Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Governor Hosts 2012 Utah Health Summit

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(Salt Lake City) – Utah Governor Gary R. Herbert convened nearly 500 of the state’s brightest public health and health policy minds for his second annual Governor’s Health Summit today in Salt Lake City. With a focus on individual and community health, Summit participants worked to further identify strategies and policies that will help ensure Utah’s health reform efforts allow Utahns to be the healthiest people in the nation, and do so at an affordable cost.

“We can’t have an honest discussion about health reform if our ultimate focus is not people’s health,” said Gov. Herbert. “If we are going to drive down the costs of health care, we have to make an effort to drive down the rates of chronic disease that fuel so much of the health care spending in our state.”

To that end, Gov. Herbert used the Summit to launch his Governor’s ‘Choose Health’ Challenge, a 10-week long program where cabinet members, state agencies, and legislators will be invited to compete with the Governor in adopting healthy behaviors.

“The Governor has shown real leadership in recognizing the important role personal and community health plays in health reform,” said Utah Department of Health executive director David Patton. “Obviously, a 10-week challenge will not solve our problems, but it demonstrates the Governor’s commitment to ensuring state employees work in an environment that values wellness.”

Other discussions at the Summit centered on critical health policy decisions the state will make in the aftermath of the United States Supreme Court’s ruling on the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA). Such decisions include how to move forward with the Utah Health Exchange and whether or not to expand the state’s Medicaid program.

Expanding Medicaid, as envisioned in the ACA, would add an additional 111,400 people to the program and would cost the state nearly $1.2 billion over the next decade. Matt Salo, executive director of the National Association of Medicaid Directors, led Summit participants through a discussion about the potential costs and benefits the State should consider in determining how to address the potential expansion.

“We are still reviewing the Medicaid expansion in Utah,” Gov. Herbert said during his keynote address. “The right thing to do is take time to carefully, deliberately plan to improve the whole program. Whether improvement means some degree of expansion, a series of new waivers, or, ideally, a block grant, Utah will seek whichever course of action serves our residents best and in the most efficient way.”

The Governor also used the Summit to outline his guiding principles regarding health reform: personal responsibility, living within budgetary constraints, allowing the states to be innovators, providing help to those who need it in a compassionate way, and relying on free market principles.

Prior to the Summit, Lt. Gov. Greg Bell led a panel discussion on medical liability reform. Panel members discussed several strategies to help reduce medical malpractice claims and costs, while improving patient safety and reducing health care costs.

“Through collaboration, innovation, and hard work, I believe we can continue to make Utah a global health care leader,” the Governor said.

# # #
 
Media Contact:
Tom Hudachko, UDOH
(o) 801.538.6232
(m) 801.560.4649
Continue reading →
Monday, September 24, 2012

Turning the page with a new Google Play Books app for Android

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Google Play Books enables you to read more than 4 million books on the go, and it's available in the U.S., Canada, Australia, Germany, Spain, Italy, France, Korea and Japan. Today we’re bringing new features to the Books app to help you better explore your books and understand what you’re reading.

Places and dictionary
School’s now in full swing and students are picking up the classics. Whether you're diving into Moby Dick or trying your hand at some Tolstoy, we want to make your reading experience as enjoyable and rewarding as possible. Starting today, when you come across an unfamiliar geographic location—a faraway city or distant mountain range—you can tap on the location to learn more about it. You’ll see an info card with a Google Map and the option to get more information by searching on Google or Wikipedia.

Explore locations using info cards in Turn Right at Machu Picchu: Rediscovering the Lost City One Step at a Time

Similarly when you come across an unfamiliar word (say, abligurition or jentacular), just tap it for a quick definition.

Translation
For those adventurous readers making their way through books in non-native languages, you can now easily translate words or phrases to and from a number of languages. Just select the text or word and use the button on the top action bar to indicate which language you’d like translate into.

Highlighting and notes
If you happen to page through any of the books on my shelf, you’ll likely find highlighted passages and illegibly scrawled notes in the margins. Starting today, our app lets you highlight text and easily take notes. And because all your books live in the cloud, highlights and notes sync on your tablet, phone and the web.


You will also notice a new sepia reading theme (in addition to the current day and night themes), 2D sliding page turn animation, and lots of stability improvements. Finally, you can now read Japanese books in a vertical, right-to-left layout—and flip pages from right to left.

We hope these features make reading more enjoyable—and productive.

Posted by Xinxing Gu, Product Manager, Google Play
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Governor to Host 2012 Health Summit

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What:             The second annual Governor's Health Summit comes at a pivotal time, as leaders in both government and the private sector face critical decisions about the future of health care in Utah.  Local and national health policy experts will discuss topics like how to ensure Utah communities are healthy communities, Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act, and health insurance exchanges.

Governor Gary R.  Herbert will also use the Summit to kickoff his “Governor’s ‘Choose Health’ Challenge.”

The entire Summit is open to the media. For a full agenda, visit www.utahsummit.com.  Also, see below for information on suggested media opportunities.

Who:               Governor Gary R. Herbert
                        David Patton, UDOH Executive Director
                        Susan Dentzer, Editor-in-Chief, Health Affairs

When:             Tuesday, September 25, 2012
                        8:30 a.m. – 1:45 p.m.

Where:            Grand America Hotel – Ballrooms B & C
                       Salt Lake City, Utah

Media
Opportunities:

8:30 a.m. – 9:40 a.m.: Opening Session, Governor Herbert issues “The Governor’s ‘Choose Health’ Challenge”

10:15 a.m. – 11 a.m.: Governor Herbert media availability. The governor will conduct interviews while undergoing a personal health test as part of “The Governor’s ‘Choose Health’ Challenge”
 
                        1:00 p.m.: Governor Herbert’s keynote address
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Thursday, September 20, 2012

Blood Pressure Out of Control for Too Many Utahns

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(Salt Lake City, UT) – This month’s Vital Signs report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention finds the majority of people with high blood pressure are taking medication yet their condition remains uncontrolled. Uncontrolled high blood pressure (HBP) is a major contributor to heart disease and stroke, two of the leading causes of death in the U.S. and Utah.

“While Utah fares better than the nation, this is still a major concern,” says Athena Carolan, Health Program Specialist with the Utah Department of Health’s Heart Disease and Stroke Prevention Program (HDSPP). “More than one-third (36.3%) of Utah commercial health plan enrollees with high blood pressure do not have their disease under control.”

The report finds one successful approach to controlling HBP is using team-based care. This system brings together pharmacists, nurses, dietitians, and community health workers to support doctors in identifying and treating patients. “We understand the value of this approach and are exploring partnerships with pharmacies and community health workers to help Utahns get a handle on their blood pressure,” said Carolan. 

Individuals can take control of their HBP by following doctor’s instructions for medications and treatment. 
In Utah, 1 in 4 adults have high blood pressure, which is defined as blood pressure greater than or equal to 140/90 mm-Hg. People with high blood pressure are four times more likely to die from a stroke and three times more likely to die from heart disease. 

For more information about how to control high blood pressure, visit www.hearthighway.org


Media Contact:
Athena Carolan
HDSPP Health Specialist
(801) 538-9209
 

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Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Obese Children Face Serious Health Problems, Now and Later

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(Salt Lake City, UT) – Nearly one-fourth of Utah 3rd-graders are at an unhealthy weight, and more boys than girls are overweight or obese.  These statistics, along with new facts about childhood unhealthy weight in Utah, were released today in the Childhood Overweight in Utah, 2012report. 

“The report is being released during National Childhood Obesity Awareness Month to highlight a public health problem plaguing our youth,” said Melanie Wallentine, Health Communications Specialist with the Utah Department of Health’s (UDOH) Physical Activity, Nutrition & Obesity (PANO) Program.

If left unchecked, conditions like high blood pressure, high cholesterol, type 2 diabetes, and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, once primarily affecting adults, will increasingly bombard children. 
“The percentage of obese children has more than tripled since the 1960s,” said Rebecca Fronberg, PANO Program Manager. “Overweight and obese children are also more likely to become obese adults.  We hope this information will help Utahns understand the magnitude of childhood obesity in our state.” 

Childhood obesity can be reduced through lifestyle changes.  Some strategies include:
  • Children should get at least 60 minutes of physical activity daily.
  • Children should eat at least 1½ to 2 cups of fruit and 1½ to 3 cups of vegetables daily.
  • Children should rarely have sugar-sweetened drinks and should eat few high-calorie foods with little or no nutritional value.
  • Parents should limit screen time (television, computer, and video games) for children age 2 and older to no more than two hours per day, and zero hours for children under age 2.

The PANO Program supports community efforts to combat childhood obesity. An example includes the TOP Star (Targeting Obesity in Preschool and Child Care Settings) Program, which works with child care providers to increase physical activity and improve nutrition in licensed child care facilities.  “A healthy environment allows children to develop healthy habits,” stated Jessica Haymond, PANO Program Healthy Child Care Coordinator.

In addition, Gold Medal Schools™, a program adopted by several Utah schools, improves students’ academic success through policies and environmental changes that support good nutrition, physical activity, and staying tobacco-free.  

“Gold Medal Schools makes it possible for elementary schools to provide physical activity and healthy nutrition choices at a time when budget cuts and testing requirements overshadow physical activity and nutrition,” said Sarah Roundy, Health Specialist with the PANO Program.

For a copy of the report and for ideas on how to help your child eat better and maintain a healthy weight, visit www.choosehealth.utah.gov.

Media Contact:
Melanie Wallentine
Physical Activity, Nutrition and Obesity Program
(o) 801-538-6514
 

Continue reading →

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