A University of Hawaii led program that has decreased the prevalence of obesity in the Pacific has been awarded a Center of Excellence designation and $2.126 million in supplemental funding from USDA‘s National Institute of Food and Agriculture.
A University of Hawaii led program that has decreased the prevalence of obesity in the Pacific has been awarded a Center of Excellence designation and $2.126 million in supplemental funding from USDA‘s National Institute of Food and Agriculture.
The Children’s Healthy Living Program for Remote Underserved Minority Populations in the Pacific Region, headed by the UH Manoa College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources Professor Rachel Novotny, received the funding through 2021.
In 2011, CHL was awarded a competitive grant of $25 million over five years from NIFAto monitor, develop and test community-based approaches to decrease the level of childhood obesity and diabetes-related disease in the U.S. Pacific, and to provide training and other outreach.
“We look forward to working with our partners to continue expanding our network to fundamentally change policies, systems and environments to ensure child wellness together,” Novotny said.
CHL data confirmed that Pacific jurisdictions are some of the most obese countries in the world, and that the health issue is growing among children as well as the adults in the region. Undernutrition is also a problem in the same areas.
Via its new designation as a Center of Excellence and with the new funding, the program can further build capacity and generate new knowledge on child health in partnering communities.
The CHL program has been working to reverse the trend of unhealthy eating and diet-related disease through community-based partnership efforts that range from encouraging children to try healthier local foods and having them grow produce in school gardens to creating more built environments for active play.
Part of the original $25 million in funding was used to fund college scholarships for undergraduate and graduate study in Pacific area universities, and to train these students in their home communities.
I think all those with obesity problems would make excellent candidates to go on that show “Alone and Afraid”. A television show that puts a naked couple on some deserted jungle for 21 days with no food or water. I’ll bet they’ll easily lose a hundred pounds or more.