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United States Public Health Service (USPHS) 2011 Field Training : Mobilizing Communities to Solve the problem of Childhood Obesity. Lets Move! Mobilization at the Federal Level. Lets Move! Mobilization at the Community level. Parents. Children. Mayors and Local officials. Schools.
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United States Public Health Service (USPHS) 2011 Field Training: Mobilizing Communities to Solve the problem of Childhood Obesity
Lets Move! Mobilization at the Community level Parents Children Mayors and Local officials Schools HealthCare Providers Chefs Community Leaders (Faith based and Neighborhood Organizations)
Obesity: A Threat to the Nation The physical and emotional health of an entire generation and the economic health and security of our nation is at stake -First Lady Michelle Obama (http://www.letsmove.gov/learnthefacts.php) • USPHS critical skills to mobilize communities: • -Mission Statement: Protect, promote, and advance the health and safety of • our Nation • -6,500 full-time public health professionals; • -Deliver the Nation's public health promotion and disease prevention programs • and advancing public health science. • -Frontlines in the Nation's fight against disease and public health challenges. • Trained for leadership during public health crises- “Mercy Model”
USPHS: Recent Mercy Model Response Missions September 2009: American Samoa Tsunami Direct: Psycho-social training for over 65 trainers Sustainable: “Train the Trainer” served over 900 children with psychosocial services; Partnership with FSU to create formal post graduate MSW program. January 2010: Haiti Earthquake Direct: 6,000 immunizations administered Sustainable: SOP implementation for Environmental Health; National vaccination program implementation May - September 2010: IHS support for suicide clusters Direct: Over 500 direct clinical services Sustainable: Implemented programs delivered healthcare services for over 1100 youth; Systems of Care grant for $1million; ongoing programmatic consultation
USPHS Mercy Model Capabilities for Lets Move! USPHS Officers often deploy as Mercy Teams. - Small groups of officers (typically 4-6) - Trained and experienced in working with host systems and agencies - Composed of specific medical, public health, and health system experts who generally integrate directly into community systems to support and sustain health systems and programs. - Teams work to bridge health service gaps between community systems/agencies; assist locals to implement programs , and build capacity in systems affected by crises or conflict.
USPHS Mercy Teams: Leadership for Lets Move! • Collaborate with existing community resources for direct and indirect services. • -Integrate professions, approaches and worldviews into actual programming; • -Promote use of community anchors, programs, and resources • Help communities improve or expand their range and quality of wellness services. • -Work across systems and agencies to better communicate, educate and coordinate • -Emphasize collaborations and coordinated approaches (not unilateral action) • -Assist in program development through implementation of best practices • Act as field coordinators for on-the-ground mobilization of “Let’s Move!” • -Coordination includes integrating in interagency environments to support their efforts • -Implement scalable leadership and management structures for “Let’s Move!”
Lets Move! Mobilization Strategy Coordinate : Systems of care; Faith-based and neighborhood organizations, healthcare entities, schools, children, social service agencies, governmental officials Integrate: Professions, approaches and worldviews into actual programming, as much as possible. Mobilize: - Agencies, programs, and staffs to deliver services and implement “Let’s Move!” programs - Community strengths and resources; - Collaborations and coordinated approaches
USPHS Mercy Teams Community Health Teams (CHT) provide “Lets move!”education, training, and clinical services to community leaders, faith-based and neighborhood organizations, parents and children Health Systems Teams (HST) provide consultation with mayors, local government and school officials, and healthcare leaders on “Lets Move!”program delivery and infrastructure development Population-based Training Teams (PTT) - develop innovative “Lets Move!” training curricula for dissemination to healthcare providers, school personnel, and parents to ensure long term sustainability and increased competencies
USPHS Mercy Teams: Population Based Service and System Level Interventions Providing healthy foods in schools Empowering parents and caregivers Increase physical activity Improving access to healthy, affordable foods
USPHS 2011 Field Training and Beyond - Return on Investment Limited resources are maximized for sustainable public health interventions - Scalable capabilities Public health programs: anti-bullying, suicide prevention, and tobacco cessation