College sport is a very lucrative business but there must be an investment to see much anticipated return. A year ago the board of Spelman College approve a decision to disband the colleges' participation in NCAA-level sports. Some of the $900K that has been invested in supporting sports teams will be reallocated to fund a college wellness program.
This is a bold move by the college president and one that should be recognized and applauded. I am a fan of organized sports but watching the worsening trend in obesity among African-American women made me recognize that this change can potentially impact the lives of the 2000 students matriculated at Spelman College and not just the 80 who participate in sponsored sports programs. Only time will tell if this investment will yield the potentially positive benefits on graduates and indirectly on society.
Reference
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/14/sports/at-spelman-dropping-sports-in-favor-of-fitness.html?pagewanted=2&_r=1&partner=rss&emc=rss&
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/03/education/spelman-college-withdrawing-from-ncaa.html
Monday, April 15, 2013
Friday, April 5, 2013
Blog Under Construction - What is My OverBlog
First, my apologies for all of the changes on the blog site over the past few weeks. It is a work in progress and I hope it will become more user-friendly and more helpful. If you have any feedback, please feel free to leave in comments area or email me anytime.
One new feature I would like your feedback on is the My OverBlog tab. I first signed up for an Overblog account in 2012 but never really had an opportunity to explore it. Now that I am using multiple social media tools, trying to offer a place that is "one stop shopping" is one of my goals.
Overblog is an online blogging tool that is extremely popular in Europe (see references below). It aggregates in one place a myriad of posts to different platforms: Facebook, Pinterest, Twitter.... and I am sure more to come. I am enjoying exploring the toolkit and also like being able to go one place to see all of my posts. I still have to tweak the "Home" button (right now I'm trying to teach myself some basic HTML...LOL!) which doesn't do anything. You'll need to hit the back button until I get this figure out.
Take a look at the references below. You might want to start your own Overblog.
References:
http://en.over-blog.com/offres-blog/presentation.php
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I0yzypzww6w
One new feature I would like your feedback on is the My OverBlog tab. I first signed up for an Overblog account in 2012 but never really had an opportunity to explore it. Now that I am using multiple social media tools, trying to offer a place that is "one stop shopping" is one of my goals.
Overblog is an online blogging tool that is extremely popular in Europe (see references below). It aggregates in one place a myriad of posts to different platforms: Facebook, Pinterest, Twitter.... and I am sure more to come. I am enjoying exploring the toolkit and also like being able to go one place to see all of my posts. I still have to tweak the "Home" button (right now I'm trying to teach myself some basic HTML...LOL!) which doesn't do anything. You'll need to hit the back button until I get this figure out.
Take a look at the references below. You might want to start your own Overblog.
References:
http://en.over-blog.com/offres-blog/presentation.php
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I0yzypzww6w
Wednesday, April 3, 2013
World Health Day 2013
April 7 is World Health Day.
This day marks the anniversary of the founding of the World Health
Organization (WHO) in 1948. Each year
the WHO selects a theme for World Health Day to provide focus on key priorities
affecting public health. The theme for
2013 is Hypertension (high blood pressure).
I’ve discussed hypertension in prior posts, but let me
review some key information that will help you understand why this is a global
public health priority.
- Hypertension is the leading risk factor for death worldwide.
- Greater than 30% of adults worldwide have blood pressure equal to or above 140/90 yet are unaware of this risk.
- The number of people known to have hypertension increased from 600 million in 1980 to 1 billion in 2008.
- Complications from high blood pressure may account for more than 9 million deaths worldwide each year.
Hypertension and the outcomes of untreated or poorly treated
high blood pressure have far reaching impacts that affect people and the global
economy
- Early death
- Disability
- Loss of income
- Workforce reductions
- Costs of medical care: personal, community and national
- Reducing salt intake
- Having a balanced nutrition plan
- Exercising regularly
- Maintaining a healthy body weight
- Regularly monitoring blood pressure
- Avoiding excessive/harmful use of alcohol
- Reducing stress
High
blood pressure is a silent killer. This
is one instance where what you don’t know can hurt you. Early detection and treatment are the keys to
reducing the impact of high blood pressure.
The global challenge is awareness and access. Communication and increasing public awareness
are of vital, but we continue to have challenges in terms of access to quality,
affordable care and support of healthy lifestyles. The 2013 World Health Day campaign will help
provide focus on prevention and control with the goal being to reduce the
global impact of this disease. You can assist
in these efforts by sharing the messaging from the WHO site, being an emissary
in your community, supporting free health screenings and being a global
advocate for quality, affordable care.
References:
Labels:
Awareness,
Global Health,
High Blood Pressure,
Hypertension,
WHO,
World Health Day
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