
This web site does not support the older browser version you are using.
To view this site, please update your browser.
This site is best viewed with Internet Explorer 5.0 or above or Netscape 6.0 or above..
Home
Citizenship
Health and Wellness News
News
PepsiCo Foundation Funds $5.2 Million Grant for Implementation and Evaluation of Community-Based Interventions in China, England, India and Mexico Impacting More Than Two Million People
(London) (September 26, 2007) – The Oxford Health Alliance (OxHA), a
global coalition with the aim of preventing the epidemic of chronic disease,
is launching a groundbreaking public health research programme to enhance
scientific knowledge about the effectiveness of community interventions in
reducing the prevalence of chronic diseases. This programme, Community
Interventions for Health, will determine what can be done in communities to
prevent the further spread of obesity, tobacco use and related illnesses. The
research will be conducted in China, England, India and Mexico, and PepsiCo
Foundation is funding OxHA with a $5.2 million grant to support the
three-year research project.
The research and intervention programme will directly impact more than two
million people across the four sites and is expected to affect more than 16
million people in surrounding areas through regional policy changes. It is
the first time such comprehensive community-based interventions will be
undertaken and then evaluated across a number of different countries.
Beginning in Spring 2008, the CIH programme will use proven, sustainable
strategies, such as coalition-building and education to target schools,
workplaces, health centers and community centres. The study will also employ
economic and policy changes, including increased access to nutritional
information and healthy food choices as well as physical activity to improve
health and reduce chronic disease. It will focus on three areas: nutrition,
physical activity and reduction in tobacco use.
Professor Stig Pramming, Executive Director of the Oxford Health Alliance,
says, “Despite the fact that chronic diseases are by far the world’s biggest
killers, they are largely overlooked by governments and donor institutions
alike, which is why the CIH programme is long overdue. The real tragedy is
that heart disease, diabetes, lung disease and many cancers are almost
entirely preventable through lifestyle changes alone, yet they are currently
pushing healthcare systems to the brink, not to mention the impact they’re
having on national economies.
“In fact, the World Health Organisation predicts that in the next 10 years,
China, India and the UK will lose $558 billion, $237 billion and $33 billion,
respectively, in foregone national income due to heart disease, stroke and
diabetes.”
In each of the four intervention communities, to be specified at a later
date, a number of policy changes will be implemented including:
- Smoke-free hospitals with healthy food options;
- Incentives and training for providers to screen for and prevent chronic
disease;
- Affordable healthy food and drink in cafeteria and vending machines;
- Advertisement-free schools;
- 30 minutes of physical activity a day, three times per week for students;
- Affordable and accessible fruit carts or farmers markets in the local
community;
- Healthy food choices at local establishments and at events;
- Safe routes for walking and bicycling;
- Health risk assessments and smoking-cessation programmes at work;
- Incentives for employees to participate in on-site and off-site physical
activity.
The CIH programme will evaluate the health impacts of these interventions
on 5,000 people in each community (which will be compared to a similar
community), thereby providing a best practice road-map, which can be
replicated in other sites around the world.
For more information about the CIH programme, visit the Oxford Health
Alliance website at
www.oxha.org/initiatives/cih.
ENDS
To request further information or arrange a briefing, contact Marisa Pulaski
at marisa.pulaski@oxha.org or
+44 (0)7736 060 152.
Notes to editor
Community Interventions for Health
The aim of CIH is to develop and showcase sustainable interventions in
addressing poor diet, tobacco use and physical activity, demonstrating their
effectiveness in a way that is both practical and scientifically rigorous.
CIH has three main component parts, which are integral to the design of the
interventions:
- Community coalition-building – key stakeholders work together to
encourage healthy lifestyle change throughout the
community, for example advocating for bicycle paths and smoke-free
environments or creating farmers’ markets
- Health education – disseminating health messages is vital for success, for
example through training of health
professionals, using mass media, social marketing or peer
educators.
- Structural change – structural interventions include advocating for and
implementing policy change, environmental
change (for example, improving the opportunities for physical
activity in schools and workplaces) and economic
change (such as reducing taxes on healthy foods). These combine to
create communities in which the healthy
choices are the easy choices.
The Oxford Health Alliance
The Oxford Health Alliance is a public-private partnership committed
to finding innovative solutions to the world’s largest preventable health
problem - the global epidemic of chronic diseases - by addressing the risk
factors of unhealthy diet, physical inactivity and tobacco use. Particularly,
OxHA brings together a cross-section of society to determine the role
employers, businesses, urban planners, economists and young people can play
in helping to make the healthy choices the easy choices.
PepsiCo Foundation
As early as the 1970’s, the Foundation was investing in research and
community-based programs to encourage healthy lifestyles. Health & Wellness
is one of the Foundation’s major planks: to develop and test innovative
models for advancing the knowledge of how to effect positive behavior change.
Its focus is on community activation, particularly in ethnic and lower
socio-economic communities. Major Health & Wellness grants have been made to
Tufts University, Chicago Communities in Schools, University of Florida,
National Council of La Raza and the American Academy of Family Physicians.
Back to top