1 / 19

Our Team

Springfield Collaborative for Active Child Health (Generously funded by Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois). Our Team. Springfield Public Schools Springfield Urban League Head Start SIU School of Medicine Illinois Department of Public Health With informal support from :

fausta
Download Presentation

Our Team

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Springfield Collaborative for Active Child Health(Generously funded by Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois)

  2. Our Team • Springfield Public Schools • Springfield Urban League Head Start • SIU School of Medicine • Illinois Department of Public Health With informal support from: The YMCA of the USA (Jeff Sunderlin) The U of I Extension Service

  3. SIU School of Medicine IL Dept of Public Health Springfield Urban League Springfield Public Schools Head Start Schools Elementary Schools Primary Care Providers Parents

  4. Our Goal To prevent and control the child obesity epidemic through a multi-disciplinary community partnership.

  5. Ridgely Springfield Collaborative District 186 Grade Schools Fairview Enos Mc Clernand Dubois Iles Butler Lindsay

  6. What We Offer • Resources and engagement • Measurement tools, expertise, and results • And…. • Link to health care providers • Link to local Head Start programs • Link to IDPH and other school health experts • Consistent health messaging

  7. Resources We Provide • Support for the District’s Wellness Policy • Health fairs • Classroom sessions with med students • Results of measures • Sustained partnership

  8. What We Measure(Fall and Spring – 1st and 4th grades) Eight Schools • BMIs (Body Mass Index: Wt(kg)/Ht²(m)) • SOFIT(System for Observing Fitness Instruction Time) • Measures levels of Moderate to Vigorous Physical Activity (MVPA) (examples: walking, running, jumping rope) • SPAN Questionnaire (4th grade only) • Forty nine multiple choice questions about activity, nutrition, and health knowledge

  9. Overweight and Obesity in 1st and 4th Gradersin District Schools, Spring 2014 *Source: 2011-2012 Data from the National Survey of Children’s Health

  10. Overweight and Obese 1st and 4th Graders - Spring 2014 • 33.0% of 1st and 4th grade students were overweight (14.2 %) or obese (18.8 %) • In a classroom of 30 students: 4 are overweight and 6 are obese

  11. Physical Education in 1st and 4th Grades District Schools MVPA=Moderate to Vigorous Physical Activity

  12. 4th Grade SPAN Questionnaire2013-14 Results

  13. 4th Grade SPAN Questionnaire2013-14 Results *Fall-to-Spring change not statistically significant

  14. 4th Grade 2013-2014 Fitnessgram Results • Compares a student’s ability to perform fitness maneuvers to four standards measuring: • Abdominal strength -- Body composition • Aerobic capacity -- Upper body strength

  15. FitnessGram (cont.) • For our 8 schools, from Fall 2013 to Spring 2014: • 7 schools saw gains in “healthy fitness zone” students in 2+ standards • In the 8th, > 70 percent of students stayed in the healthy fitness zone for 3 standards.

  16. The Benefits for Active, Healthy and Fit Students • Improved test scores and grades • Improved behavior and fewer disciplinary referrals • Improved attendance • More likely to become healthy, fit adults • May influence the health of other family members

  17. Other Efforts Keep Kids in School Coalition (formed Fall 2013) • SIU SOM doctors, residents and nurses provided exams • SCDPH provided on-site immunizations • 283 students excluded this fall vs. over 700 in 2013 (fewer than 100 students excluded as of Sept. 5) Enos School Partnership (1984-present) Pending: Develop a model for targeting interventions; grant application submitted

  18. Conclusion The Springfield Collaborative: • Supports 186’s efforts to improve health via wellness policies, classroom events, health fairs • Measures student BMIs, PE quality, student knowledge and attitudes about healthy habits • Involves students, parents, health care providers, teachers and school staff • Supports strong, continued commitment among SIU SOM, District 186, and other partners

  19. Thank You. Questions/Comments? Generously funded by Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois

More Related