Obesity taskforce works on action plan

Published 8:17 am Friday, July 1, 2011

From Left Ransom Williams of Bancorp South Bank, Sara Byard of the Central Alabama Regional Planning and Development Commission, Sherrie Jiles of Head Start in Lowndes County, Fletcher Fountain, mayor of Fort Deposit, Shakirah Tajuddin of the Department of Human Resources in Lowndes County, Jennifer Cole of UAB Reach Up and Out, and Katanga Mants, county extension coordinator for Lowndes County, participate in a River Region Obesity Task Force meeting held in Hayneville on Thursday.

By Fred Guarino
The Lowndes Signal

The Lowndes County delegation of the River Region Obesity Task Force will work to help develop community level resources to fight obesity in the county.

What is obesity and why an obesity task force in Lowndes County?

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Obesity refers to an excessive amount of body fat, according to the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases.

The River Region Obesity Task Force was formed because the Montgomery Metro Area is tied for the most obese metro area of the United States with Stockton, Calif. for adults with an obesity rate of 34.6 percent, according to the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index collected in 2009 and Sara Byard, project Manager for the Central Alabama Regional Planning and Development Commission.

According to Gallup, more than one-third of adults are classified as obese in the 10 metro areas found to be most obese.

Helping to develop community level resources to fight obesity was one of the action items developed at a meeting of the Lowndes County delegation held in Hayneville at the County Commission auditorium on Thursday.

The River Region includes Montgomery, Elmore, Autauga, Lowndes and Macon counties, said Byard.

“I feel like in the meeting today we developed a direction for the River Region Obesity Task Force in Lowndes County. And I think that we will be able to make some very positive changes over the next three years. And I’m very excited about working with our local Lowndes County delegation, our County Captain Katanga Mants,” said Byard.

Among those attending the meeting were Jennifer Cole of UAB Reach Up and Out, Ransom Williams of Bancorp South Bank, Shakirah Tajuddin of the Department of Human Resources in Lowndes County, Sherrie Jiles of Head Start in Lowndes County, Fletcher Fountain, mayor of Fort Deposit, Mants, county extension coordinator for Lowndes County, and Byard.

Mants explained that the action item for Lowndes County would be “to assess what we already have in the county in order to address the issue of obesity. We want to look at what each community has to offer and how we can best utilize what we already have and then hopefully make some serious impact on the issue of obesity in Lowndes County.”

Byard said a proposal of action items to address obesity presented Thursday came about following a Center for Disease Control CDC change tool assessment in which people were polled in the community. She said people were brought from the community at large, institutions, organizations, work sites and schools.

She said an action plan would be formulated over the next three years to try to make some positive changes to help reduce obesity.

Other action items discussed and agreed to by the local delegation include:

•Review school wellness policies and update them, facilitate and monitor the active use of wellness policies in six school systems over three years.

•Encourage local governments to enhance safety at places where people can exercise within 24 months.

•Establish a point of sale food labeling program within three years.

•Assure smoking ordinance are passed at the local level River Region-wide.

•Develop wellness goals and strategies in 27 River Region governments and at least 15 private employers over three years. Encourage and facilitate the use of insurance incentive polices for wellness and tobacco use, as well as pool resources to develop employee clinics.

•Work with health care provides in the River Region to streamline polices and resources relative to chronic disease management. Streamlining will occur within 24 months and include private hospitals, health systems, the Alabama Department of Public Health, federally qualified health centers, school system nurses, non-profit agencies, nursing schools and professional associations of physicians.

Assure that all six public school system in the Region have at least 30 minutes of physical education per day for elementary and middle school student by Aug. 15, 2013.