Fund for Public Health NY

Share this Page:
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Email to a friend
  • Bookmark
  • About Us
    • Our Partners
    • Our Board of Directors
    • Our Team
    • Success Stories
    • Join Our Team
  • What's New
    • Grants Awarded
    • Events and Campaigns
    • Join Our Team
    • RFPs and Bidding Opportunities
    • NYC Health Department News
  • Spotlight
  • Programs
    • Promote Quality Health Care for All
    • Be Tobacco Free
    • Promote Physical Activity and Healthy Eating
    • Be Heart Healthy
    • Stop the Spread of HIV and Other Sexually Transmitted Diseases
    • Recognize and Treat Depression
    • Reduce Risky Alcohol Use and Drug Dependence
    • Prevent and Detect Cancer
    • Raise Healthy Children
    • Make All Neighborhoods Healthy Places
    • Learning and Leading
  • Publications & Resources
    • NYC Health Department
    • City Health Information
    • Health Bulletins
    • Vital Signs
    • Take Care New York
    • EpiQuery
    • Environmental Health Portal
    • Rodent Information Portal
    • BeFit Website
  • Get Involved
    • Events and Campaigns
    • Stay in Touch
    • Donate
  • Donate
    • Support a Campaign
    • Support a Record of Success
    • Give Time
Slide 2
Slide 1

Approximately 60% of adults and 40% of elementary and middle school children in NYC are overweight or obese.

  • Promote Quality Health Care for All
    • New York City's eHealth Agenda
    • Addressing Health Disparities in NYC
    • Medication Adherence Project
    • Worksite Wellness
  • Be Tobacco Free
    • Stimulus Funding to Reduce Smoking in New York City
    • Enhancing Anti-Smoking Messaging
  • Promote Physical Activity and Healthy Eating
    • Creating an Environment in NYC that Prevents Obesity
    • NYC Strategic Alliance for Health
    • Building Physical Activity into the Environment
    • Eat Your Fruits and Veggies
    • Increasing and Improving Physical Activity for Children
    • Engaging Parents in the Fight Against Obesity
  • Be Heart Healthy
    • Cut the Salt!
    • Blood Pressure Control, Starting at Home
    • Trans Fat Free NYC
  • Stop the Spread of HIV and Other Sexually Transmitted Infections
    • Reducing Barriers to Voluntary HIV Testing
    • Increasing HIV Testing on Riker's Island
    • Substance Abuse, HIV and Hepatitis Prevention
    • High School-based STD Screening: From Privately-Funded Pilot to City Program
  • Recognize and Treat Depression
    • Mind Your Health Conference
    • Depression Screening and Management in Primary Care
    • Heal 17
  • Reduce Risky Alcohol Use and Drug Dependence
    • Minimizing Risks for Brooklyn Police Officers
  • Prevent and Detect Cancer
    • Patient and Provider Support to Increase Colon Cancer Screenings
    • Reducing Disparities in Breast Cancer
  • Raise Healthy Children
    • Giving Brooklyn Families a Healthy Start
    • Cribs for Kids
    • Helping First Time Moms Succeed
    • Breastfeeding Initiative
    • Educating Mothers, Text by Text
    • Early Childhood Intervention: Focusing on Families as Partners
  • Make All Neighborhoods Healthy Places
    • Climate Change as a Public Health Issue
    • Faith-Based "Health Ministries"
    • School-based Health Center Reproductive Health Project
    • Health Effects of Air Pollution
    • Salmonella Surveillance
    • Healthcare Emergency Preparedness Program
    • Take Care Staten Island
    • Examining Animal Hoarding
    • Assessing Health Risks of Synthetic Turf
    • Grading Restaurants to Make Them Safer
    • Detecting Disease Outbreak in NYC
  • Learning and Leading
    • Connecting Leaders in Health
    • Epidemiology Scholars
Donate Today

Stay Connected

Home >> Programs >> Promote Physical Activity and Healthy Eating >> Engaging Parents in the Fight Against Obesity

Engaging Parents in the Fight Against Obesity

More than 40% of New York City children in elementary schools and Head Start programs are overweight or obese. Many serious health problems are related to being overweight or obese, such as asthma, depression, diabetes and heart disease. If not addressed, childhood obesity can lead to serious health problems in adulthood. Age-appropriate physical activity in childhood is necessary for proper growth and development. Despite known benefits of physical activity, many children have little physical activity during the school day.

Private funding through the Fund for Public Health in New York (FPHNY) enabled the NYC Health Department to introduce school-based physical activity led by parents in 12 schools in neighborhoods where rates of obesity are particularly high: Harlem, South Bronx and Central Brooklyn. Children were encouraged to engage in physical activity through school-based sessions held during recess and before and after school. Sessions were organized by Parent Activity Coordinators (PACs) recruited from each school's parent population. The program provided participating schools with essential tools such as playground improvements, equipment and training for PACs to facilitate active, safe and healthy play at school.

Overall, the PACs facilitated an additional 1,600 hours of structured physical activity for students at schools. PACs were creative in the changes they made to the school environment: one PAC started an intramural basketball league, another started a walking club, and at one school, the PAC was instrumental in writing school policy that prohibits taking recess away as a punishment. The success of this program demonstrates the importance and effectiveness of building the capacity to lead physical activity into existing resources. The NYC Health Department is continuing to address obesity with multiple approaches. Learn more.

 

  • Home
  • Privacy Statement
  • Careers
  • Contact Us
  • © 2012 The Fund for Public Health in New York, Inc.
Find us on Facebook