HHS Awards $10 Million in Prevention and Wellness Grants to 10 National Organizations
Thursday, September 02, 2010
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Posted by: Heather Levi
HHS Awards $10 Million in Prevention and
Wellness Grants to 10 National Organizations
Funded by the American Recovery and Reinvestment
Act of 2009
The U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) today announced awards of $10
million to 10 national non-profit organizations to support public health
efforts to reduce tobacco use and reduce obesity through increased physical
activity and improved nutrition.
These
competitive awards are part of the HHS Communities Putting Prevention to
Work
(CPPW) initiative, a comprehensive prevention and wellness initiative funded
under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.
"Communities
Putting Prevention to Work will transform the environments where Americans live, work,
learn, and play to promote health and prevent heart attack, cancer, diabetes,
and stroke,” said HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius. "As our nation’s health care system evolves, preventing
disease will improve Americans’ quality of life.”
These 10
national organizations will provide expert guidance to community leaders, help
sustain prevention efforts when Recovery Act funding ends, and foster a
national movement toward prevention by implementing key practices across their
networks and systems.
The selected national
organizations will help communities implement prevention policies that will
enable residents to live longer, healthier lives. Examples of these strategies
include: incentives to food retailers to locate and offer healthier options in
underserved areas; healthier choices in child care, schools, and the workplace;
subsidized memberships to recreational facilities; safe routes to school; and evidence-based
strategies that discourage tobacco use and increase utilization of cessation
programs.
"In the United States, seven of 10 deaths result from
chronic disease, with tobacco, obesity, poor nutrition and lack of physical
activity as the key risk factors for disease,” said HHS Assistant Secretary for
Health Howard K. Koh, M.D., M.P.H.
"We are proud to partner with these national organizations that have
proven their expertise and will advance progress in helping Americans achieve
and enjoy better health.”
Of the 10 organizations
receiving $1 million grants, seven organizations will receive funding for
obesity prevention, and three will receive funding for tobacco prevention and
cessation. Representatives from
the selected organizations participated in a roundtable discussion today with
Dr. Koh to share highlights of each organization’s expertise and identify
opportunities for cross-collaboration.
The awardees
are:
·
American
Academy of Pediatrics
·
American
Heart Association
·
American
Lung Association
·
Association
of American Indian Physicians
·
BlazeSports
America
·
Community
Food Security Coalition
·
National
Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials Educational Fund
·
National
Recreation and Parks Association
·
Sesame
Workshop
·
Society
for Public Health Education
CPPW reflects
HHS' broader commitment to helping prevent disease before it starts. The program has five distinct
initiatives: a community initiative, a states and territories change
initiative, a states chronic disease self management initiative, the national
organizations initiative, and a supporting media campaign.
In addition to
these new grant awards to national organizations, HHS will soon launch a
National Prevention Media Campaign that will deliver hard-hitting
advertisements to complement and support the work of CPPW. A contract for $28 million was recently
awarded to the Academy for Educational Development (AED). This new media contract will also develop
consumer materials for First Lady Michelle Obama’s Let’s Move! campaign aimed at preventing
childhood obesity.
The following
grants have already been awarded under CPPW:
·
Community
Initiative:
$372 million in prevention and wellness grants to 44 communities around the
nation.
·
States
and Territories Policy and Environmental Change Initiative: more than $119 million
to states and U.S. territories to support public health efforts to reduce
obesity, increase physical activity, improve nutrition, and decrease
smoking.
·
States
Chronic Disease Self Management Initiative: $27 million will allow states to
provide self-management programs to older adults with chronic diseases, build
statewide delivery systems, and develop the workforce that delivers these
programs. ( OPHS
Press Office)
To view a fact
sheet on Communities Putting Prevention to Work Leveraging National Organizations, visit http://www.hhs.gov/ophs/funding/cppwfactsheet.html.
To learn more
about Communities Putting Prevention to Work, visit http://www.hhs.gov/recovery/programs/cppw/factsheet.html
and http://www.cdc.gov/chronicdisease/recovery.
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