American Academy of Family Physicians and MetLife Foundation Collaborate to Create New Educational Materials to Address Childhoo
2009年10月23日 - 12:00AM
PRニュース・ワイアー (英語)
$150,000 grant funds educational materials promoting fitness for
the entire family LEAWOOD, Kan., Oct. 22 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ --
The American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP) and the AAFP
Foundation announce that they have been awarded a $150,000 grant
from MetLife Foundation, designed to counter the national epidemic
of childhood obesity by empowering family physicians with new ways
to promote physical activity, nutrition and emotional well-being.
The partnership will produce educational materials for children,
including books and publications. The materials are designed to
encourage patients to talk with family physicians about fitness and
to work together to develop a plan to enable sustained healthy life
style choices among family members. The endeavor will be
administered by Americans In Motion (AIM), an AAFP initiative
designed to improve the health of all Americans through
multifaceted fitness programs. This year's grant builds upon an
initiative that was successfully launched in 2008 by MetLife
Foundation and the AAFP, which has to date included the production
of a DVD and children's book discussing fitness for the family,
with a special emphasis on ways to maintain fitness for children.
"We are pleased to continue this important partnership with MetLife
Foundation," said Lori Heim, M.D., president of the AAFP. "Children
learn by example, and to effectively combat childhood obesity,
candid discussions must take place between doctors, young patients
and their parents. This initiative will plant the seed for such
discussions." The materials will be distributed in late summer 2010
to approximately 37,000 family physicians, as well all 455 family
medicine residency training programs in the United States, and will
be available in Spanish. They are designed to be used in the
waiting rooms of family physicians' practices, creating
opportunities for parents and children to learn and talk about
issues related to fitness with their physician. Rather than
emphasizing diets and weight loss, the initiative will present
fitness as a balance of physical activity, nutrition and emotional
well-being. Only sustained, healthy lifestyle choices will be
successful in countering childhood obesity. Today's children may
have a shorter life expectancy than their parents because of
obesity-related illnesses. Almost 60 percent of Americans do not
get sufficient daily exercise and almost 65 percent are overweight
or obese. But family physicians are in a strong position to
positively influence their patients' fitness habits and, as they
conduct 208 million patient visits each year and care for the
entire family, they can help fight childhood obesity on a national
scale. "Family physicians are an important link to halting the
growing threat of childhood obesity, by providing families with
much-needed health information," said Dennis White, president and
CEO of MetLife Foundation. "MetLife Foundation is pleased to
support this initiative, which is dedicated to helping families
make smart decisions that can result in longer, healthier lives."
About The American Academy of Family Physicians Founded in 1947,
the AAFP represents more than 94,600 physicians and medical
students nationwide. It is the only medical society devoted solely
to primary care. Nearly one in four of all office visits are made
to family physicians. That is 208 million office visits each year
-- nearly 83 million more than the next largest medical specialty.
Today, family physicians provide more care for America's
underserved and rural populations than any other medical specialty.
In the increasingly fragmented world of health care where many
medical specialties limit their practice to a particular organ,
disease, age or sex, family physicians are dedicated to treating
the whole person across the full spectrum of ages. Family
medicine's cornerstone is an ongoing, personal patient-physician
relationship focused on integrated care. To learn more about the
AAFP and about the specialty of family medicine, please visit
aafp.org. For more information about the AAFP's positions on issues
and clinical care and downloadable multi-media on family medicine
and health care, visit the AAFP Media Center. For more information
about health care, health conditions, and wellness, please visit
familydoctor.org. About the AAFP Foundation The American Academy of
Family Physicians (AAFP) Foundation serves as the philanthropic arm
of the AAFP. Its primary goal is to enhance health care delivered
to the American people by developing and providing philanthropic
resources for the promotion and support of family medicine. For
more information or to support the work of the AAFP Foundation,
please visit aafpfoundation.org. About MetLife Foundation MetLife
Foundation was established by MetLife in 1976 to carry on its
longstanding tradition of corporate contributions and community
involvement. Grants support health, education, civic and cultural
programs. For more information about the Foundation, visit
http://www.metlife.org/ Media contact: Janelle Davis Ted Mitchell
American Academy of Family Physicians MetLife Foundation (800)
274-2237 Ext. 5222 (401) 827-3236 DATASOURCE: MetLife Foundation
CONTACT: Janelle Davis, American Academy of Family Physicians,
+1-800-274-2237 Ext. 5222, ; Ted Mitchell, MetLife Foundation,
+1-401-827-3236, Web Site: http://www.metlife.org/
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