Michael F. Easley
Governor

The Great Seal of the State of North Carolina Carmen Hooker Odom
Secretary

North Carolina
Department of Health and Human Services

For Release: IMMEDIATE
Date: November 21, 2005

  Contact: Carol Schriber

Fighting fat: New school-based initiative will help teens and pre-teens develop healthier eating and physical activity habits

RALEIGH—Four North Carolina school-based health centers have been awarded Students Eating Smart and Moving More (SESAMM) grants as part of the N.C. Division of Public Health's obesity prevention efforts. The grants will provide interventions for students ages 10-19 and their families from January 2006 through May 2007.

"We will avoid negative messages and focus totally on fun, healthy behaviors that students will enjoy and want to continue after the program ends," said Michelle Futrell, the registered dietitian who is coordinating the program.

Receiving the $25,000 grants will be Buncombe County Health Department’s Health Center at Erwin Middle School; Lincoln Community Health Center at Hillside High School in Durham County; Wilmington Health Access for Teens’ Health Center at Lakeside High School in New Hanover County; and the Toe River Health District’s Health Center at East Yancey Middle School in Yancey County.

Up to 25 student volunteers will be selected to participate in the 18-week program, which includes screening, individual counseling, and group sessions conducted by a registered dietitian. The interactive, after-school group sessions will provide education and skill-building in both nutrition and physical activity. Students will prepare and taste healthy foods, develop media literacy, practice decision-making skills, and choose a fun physical activity that can become part of a healthy lifestyle. Students who don’t get into the program this year will be put on a waiting list to participate in fall and spring programs in the next school year.

Each health center will hold five sessions, open to parents of SESAMM students as well as other interested community members, to build home, school and community support for healthy eating and physical activity. The adults will learn about eating smart at home; eating smart on the run; moving more every day, everywhere; and reducing time spent watching TV or playing computer games.

The grants are being offered initially as pilot programs only in school-based health centers. However, evaluations are being designed to allow adaptation for schools that have strong Coordinated School Health Programs and community support.

"Among North Carolina children, the rates of both overweight and risk of overweight exceed the national average," Futrell said. "In 2004, over 27 percent of children seen in North Carolina public health settings were overweight, and an additional 18 percent were at risk for overweight. Childhood overweight can lead to serious health consequences, particularly as overweight children become overweight adults."

"The best time to start building healthy habits is in childhood. The best places to do that are in the home and at school," she added.

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