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National Physical Activity Plan. Antronette (Toni) Yancey, MD, MPH, FACPM Professor, Dept. of Health Services Co-Director, Center to Eliminate Health Disparities (CEHD) UCLA School of Public Health. Why and Why Now?.
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National Physical Activity Plan Antronette (Toni) Yancey, MD, MPH, FACPM Professor, Dept. of Health Services Co-Director, Center to Eliminate Health Disparities (CEHD) UCLA School of Public Health
Why and Why Now? • Orchestrate efforts along the lines of other national disease-focused health plans (e.g., diabetes, arthritis), physical activity plans in other countries (e.g., Australia, Canada), and state physical activity plans • Build on momentum from release of first Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans earlier this month
Other US National Health Plans: • National Arthritis Action Plan: A Public Health Strategy • National Blueprint: Increasing Physical Activity Among Adults Age 50 and Older • A Public Health Action Plan to Prevent Heart Disease and Stroke
Other Physical Activity Plans Around the World: • Canada • Finland • Northern Ireland • Pakistan • Scotland • UK • Western Australia
Arizona Iowa Nebraska Colorado Maine New Mexico Georgia Maryland South Carolina Hawaii Montana South Dakota State Physical Activity Plans
How Is the Effort Supported? • Prevention Research Center (focused on physical activity), University of South Carolina • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
Coordinating CommitteeFields represented • Public Health • Education • Transportation, Urban Design, and Community Planning • Mass Media • Healthcare • Business and Industry • Parks, Recreation, Fitness, and Sports • Volunteer and Non Profit Organizations
Organizational Partners • AAHPERD • AAP • AARP • ACS • ACSM • AHA • CDC
Coordinating Committee Russell Pate, USC, Chair Jim Whitehead, ACSM, Co-Chair Steven Blair, USC David Buchner, UI/Urbana-Champaign Carmen Cutter, SDSU/ALR Colleen Doyle, ACS Jacqueline Epping, CDC Barry Franklin (Beaumont Hosp.), AHA Matthew Grady (Children’s Hosp., Phila.), AAP
Coordinating Committee Kelly Griffin, AARP William Haskell, Stanford Amelia Lee (LSU), AAHPERD Bess Marcus, Brown U. Russell Pate, Univ. South Carolina Michael Pratt, CDC James Sallis (SDSU), ALR James Whitehead, ACSM Antronette (Toni) Yancey, UCLA
Activities To Date • Recruit of organizational partners across sectors • Identify model plans from disease-targeted, international and state physical activity plans • Build website: www.physicalactivityplan.org • Plan national meeting now scheduled for June 30-July 9, 2009 • Assemble evidence base through commissioned white papers targeting key sectors
National Plan Sectors • Public Health - public health agencies at the federal, state and local levels Author: Greg Heath, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga • Education – education agencies at federal, state, and local levels; schools at preschool to college levels Author: Daryl Seidentop, Ohio State University • Voluntary, Not for Profit Organizations – volunteer organizations committed to issues that impact or are impacted by physical activity (health and non-health) Author: Colleen Doyle, American Cancer Society • Transportation/Urban Design/Community Planning – relevant agencies at federal, state and local levels • Author: TBN
National Plan Sectorsand White Paper Authors • Mass Media – web; television; media campaigns Author: Adrian Bauman, University of Sydney • Healthcare – federal and state program; health insurance industry; clinical practice Author: Kevin Patrick, University of California at San Diego • Business/Industry – worksite health; manufacturers of products impacting physical activity Author: Nico Pronk, HealthPartners Health Behavior Group • Parks/Recreation/Fitness/Sports – recreation and parks agencies at federal, state, and local levels; private fitness industry; professional and amateur sports organizations Author: Andrew Mowen, Pennsylvania State University
White Papers:Working to arrange publication in special issue of a refereed journal • Primary sources: systematic reviews complemented by individual studies • Secondary sources: recommended or best practice physical activity interventions from authoritative organizations • Comprehensive reviews: not included • Recommend most promising intervention strategies, based on criteria such as: *strength of evidence *likely efficacy *reach *potential for wide dissemination *potential for sustainability of intervention or effects *cost or cost-effectiveness *potential for reducing disparities *ability to target inactive populations
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