Transcript Slide 1

Program Summary
www.healthcorps.org
How to Pay for Stuff
• Making America’s Students & Citizens Agents
of Change
Getting Young Americans to Take Charge of
Their Health
• HealthCorps® (www.healthcorps.org), a proactive health movement
founded by heart surgeon and Emmy Award-winning talk show host Dr.
Mehmet Oz, is fighting the obesity and mental resilience crises by
empowering American students and their families to become health agents
of change for their communities. A 501 (C) 3, HealthCorps is helping the
country reach the tipping point towards wellness now and for the future of
our children.
• HealthCorps is transforming the educational paradigm one school at a time
by addressing the "Whole Child" and activating a student's mind, body and
spirit to create a more vital life for themselves and their community. We
are introducing young people to their true human nature as well as the
natural world.
• HealthCorps’ three priorities are:
• Educating the Student Body®: We empower and
educate high school students via real time classroom
participation using a peer mentoring model. What are
we teaching? Balance and Integration through mental
strength, nutrition and fitness. We want American
youth to use food as pharmacy, feelings and fuel. We
want American children to increase their physical
activity. We want to help restore a critical
relationship with Nature among children and teens.
•
Like a Peace Corps for Health, HealthCorps is a national health
educational/peer mentoring program up and running in 41 high schools
in 11 states (AZ, CA, DC, DE, FL, MS, NJ, NY, OH, OR, TX). Since its
conception, the program has impacted approximately 60,000 students
and an additional 115,000 community members. By 2015, HealthCorps
aspires to have a presence in 400 schools in all 50 states.
•
The heart of the program: HealthCorps Coordinators are recent
college graduates who defer entry into medical school or graduate health
programs to participate in public service through a two-year full time
assignment at a designated public high school where they conduct
approximately ten classes a week and lead after school and community
programs.
•
Coordinators empower teens in underserved communities to make simple
lifestyle changes to enhance their well-being and resilience and take the
message to friends, families and neighbors. They show students the
essence of purpose in life and highlight accountability and
choice. Coordinators’ efforts are guided by the School Health Index
(SHI), a key tool developed by the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) and compiled by a School Wellness Council
comprised of students, faculty and community members.
Our school program includes:
• An experiential curriculum (Nutrition, Fitness and Mental Strength) developed with leading
integrative medicine experts and delivered through in-school seminars and after school clubs;
• “Walk Across America” pedometer contests for students and teachers;
• Tools to create educated consumers, including food label, portion and ingredient deciphering;
• Tools to build mental strength and hope, manage stress and problem solve;
• Promoting everyday exercise like walking, yoga and simple strength-building routines;
• Service learning projects to transfer HealthCorps lessons to other students;
• Field trips to organic farms and hospitals to promote Real World Relevance;
• “Teen Battle Chef” farm-to-table nutritional and cooking programs and competitions;
• “Biggest Loser” faculty and school staff fitness competitions;
• Parent’s Nights/Staff Professional Development;
• School-wide health fairs to show students and teachers the resources within their reach;
• Creating a Fit Town™ – the HealthCorps Challenge: We activate “wellbeings” through “Fit Town” that reaches well beyond the school yard to
help students, families and organizations experience wellness through
community service. FitTown efforts are guided by key tools developed by
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: the Community Health
Index (CHI).
Our community outreach connects students,
citizens and organizations with Nature and the
“built” environment and empowers them to affect
healthy change through such projects and
initiatives as:
– Photovoice projects to document healthdeficient community settings
– Creating and maintaining school &
community gardens
– Bodega & convenience store makeovers
– Online healthy resource community maps
– Identifying and beautifying outdoor spaces
for physical activity
– “Highway to Health” Festivals to highlight
community resources.
• HealthCorps partners with schools and school
districts. Coordinators form important ties
with public health departments, school
systems, community foundations, the business
community, city food banks and other nonprofit organizations to coalesce efforts.
HealthCorps Advocacy: We advocate for public policy across all levels of our government that put
health and physical education back into the core curriculum of the American education system and
target policy shifts that move us towards safer environments affecting health (food systems,
transportation systems, public space design systems, nature) that encourage and enable people to be
more physically active.
Both the HealthCorps Chairman Dr. Oz and President Michelle Bouchard have appeared before the
United States Senate’s Health Education Labor and Pension Committee in 2009 to discuss wellness
policy ideas and HealthCorps’ mission and achievements.
•
Obesity in the United States has reached epidemic proportions, with more than 35% of Americans classified as obese and an
additional 30% as overweight. Obesity has been a steadily rising trend since the late 1970s. Recent reports, such as the
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s “F Is for Fat 2010: How Obesity Policies are Failing in America,” highlight the critical
call for action. (http://healthyamericans.org/reports/obesity2010) In 2009, twenty-eight states saw a significant increase in
obesity and 15 of these states experienced an increase for the second year in a row. Experts now predict that, without an
intervention, the majority of the country will be obese by 2012.
Obesity Trends* Among U.S. Adults
BRFSS, 1990, 1999, 2008
(*BMI 30, or about 30 lbs. overweight for 5’4” person)
1999
1990
2008
No Data
<10%
10%–14%
15%–19%
20%–24%
Source: CDC Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System.
25%–29%
≥30%
• Alarmingly, the steepest increase is among children and adolescents.
Obesity is directly linked to high blood pressure, type 2 Diabetes and
atherosclerosis. In turn, these unhealthy conditions are the major cause of
heart attacks, strokes and heart failure. We are now seeing cardiovascular
disease in teenagers and the average age of first heart attacks has dropped
by over 10 years in the overweight patient. Other morbid conditions linked
to obesity are certain cancers and arthritis.
•
Regional, ethnic, and economic divergences characterize the population of
obese and overweight people in the U.S. Hispanics are the most
overweight, although obesity is the highest among African Americans.
•
Affinity Health Plan Study: In June, 2009 Dr. Oz presented the results of an
independently conducted two-year efficacy study overseen by a methodologist from
Cornell University and funded by Affinity Health Plan. The focus of the study was
to quantify the impact of the HealthCorps program on a predominately Hispanic
New York City intervention group. Results of the study found significant benefits
of HealthCorps on three dimensions:
1) Sugary soda pop consumption decreases by 0.61 times per week;
2) Participants are 36% more likely to report that they are more physically active;
3) Participants score 10.7% higher on the test of health knowledge. (These
estimates assume zero benefit for dropouts; excluding dropouts results in larger
effect sizes.)
• Albert Einstein College of Medicine works
with HealthCorps in conducting CDC School
Health Index exit interviews with principals
and is applying for study grants for second
generation program evaluation and healthrelated research activities.
• The May issue of The Journal of Pediatrics published
the results of a study on how low impact aerobic
exercise and obesity influence standardized test
scores among 7th, 8th and 9th graders in California
schools. The conclusion points to a direct correlation
between significant regular aerobic exercise/healthy
body weight and higher standardized test scores.
• In support of the HealthCorps’ model, a recent Johns Hopkins
study (Youfa Wang, associate professor, Bloomberg School's
Center for Human Nutrition) concluded that a number of
factors, including peers, had a greater influence over the food
choices of older kids than did the family or parents (Social
Science and Medicine, May 25, 2009).
• “Physical activity and free play are essential to maintaining a
healthy weight and supporting cognitive, physical, social and
emotional development and well-being.” (Stanford School of
Medicine, “Building Generation Play,” 2007)
• According to a special report from the New
York City Health Department and the New
York City Department of Education,
standardized test score performance increases
consistently with increasing NYC
FITNESSGRAM scores across all weight
groups.
• Naperville Central High School's Learning Readiness Physical
Education Program – the Illinois school made a direct
connection between physical exercise and improved reading
scores and overall academic performance. In this light,
HealthCorps Advisory Board Member, Dr. John Ratey,
Clinical Associate Professor of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical
School wrote Spark, a book that explores the connection
between exercise and the brain’s performance and shows how
even moderate exercise will supercharge mental circuits to
beat stress, sharpen thinking, enhance memory and much
more.
Farm2Table Cooking Program
• For the nutrition section of the curriculum, since the
start of the 2009-2010 school year, HealthCorps has
benefited from a formal relationship with Family
Cook Productions to train all Coordinators to carry
out their “Teen Battle Chef” farm-to-table nutritional
cooking in schools. The Teen Battle Chef Leadership
program also creates culinary arts career internships
for HealthCorps students.
• The projected budget for FY 2011 is
approximately $5 million. Total funding is
garnered through a combination of state, city,
private foundations, corporate and individual
contributions. Each HealthCorps school
program costs approximately $70,000 with
over half that amount going towards the
Coordinator base salary and fringe benefits.
•
HealthCorps’ Founder and Chairman, Dr. Mehmet Oz, is one of the world’s leading
cardiac surgeons and Emmy Award-Winning host of the nationally syndicated talk
show, The Dr. Oz Show, from Harpo Productions/Sony Television. He served as
Health Expert on The Oprah Winfrey Show for five seasons and is also a bestselling author. He presides over HealthCorps’ Board of Directors and guides the
organization and its program.
•
In addition to driving HealthCorps student and community outreach, HealthCorps
sponsorship represents an investment in a broad nationwide movement.
HealthCorps is strategically partnered with leading private and public initiatives
such as the American Diabetes Association, California Walnut Board, Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, Chiquita Brands International, Delos Living, the
W. K. Kellogg Foundation, the Cleveland Clinic, Canyon Ranch Institute, The
Harvard Sleep Lab and the National Association for Health Education, among
others.
National Headquarters: 191 Seventh Avenue, Suite 2N, New York, NY
10011 212.742.2875
• President: [email protected]
• Press: [email protected]
• Education: [email protected]
• Strategic Partnerships: [email protected]
• Finance: [email protected]
“HEALTHCORPS,” “EDUCATING THE STUDENT BODY,” “FIT TOWN” AND THE HEART/APPLE LOGO ARE TRADEMARKS OF HEALTHCORPS, INC.