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Health Programs Being
Emphasized at Churches
Excerpt By
Amanda Gardner, HealthScoutNews
(HealthScoutNews) -- It's preached
in the pulpit and takes place among the pews, but the focus is
not so much on saving your soul as it is on lowering your body
fat, blood pressure, cholesterol and blood sugar.
Health disparities among racial and
ethnic groups in the United States are soaring, with cancer, diabetes,
stroke and heart disease rates all higher among blacks and Hispanics
than among whites. While health officials grapple with how best
to close the gaps, local communities have taken matters into their
own hands.
One way is through church-based health
programs that include everything from gospel aerobics to smoking
cessation classes.
Jeanette Jordan, a Charleston, S.C.-based
dietician and a spokeswoman for the American Diabetes Association,
is working with the African-Methodist Episcopal Church in South
Carolina to bring health programs to its 170,000 members. The
program has produced The Good Health Cookbook and organized
walking clubs, exercise classes and a "Health Minute"
in churches. Jordan also published a "faith-based weight-management
guide" called Be Good To Yourself, which includes
sample menus and tips on how to modify your favorite recipes to
reduce calories and fat.
Jordan says that about half the participants
have decreased the amount of fat they were eating, although fruit
and vegetable intake has remained flat, with only 13 percent of
churchgoers eating five servings a day.
The Centers for Healthy Hearts & Souls
in Pittsburgh also works through black churches to provide adult
fitness and nutrition programs. "We've had 1,200 women who
have participated in our fitness program, and I believe that somewhere
around 75 percent have decreased their waist-hip ratio,"
says Mattie Woods, the centers' executive director. Right now,
eight churches are involved in the program. Another 45 are on
the waiting list.
Woods says the organization's success
comes largely from the fact that community members themselves
design and implement the programs, rather than an outsider who
swoops in to impose his or her views.
"The actual community decides
on what programs they feel are necessary for the community,"
Woods says. "There is an untapped resource of experts already
in the community. It's from the inside. They say what works. They
decide." One local fitness expert who had taught jazzercise
for more than 10 years choreographed an exercise program to go
with gospel music.
"The advantage is that more than
half of the African-American population is spiritually rooted
-- to church, to the community," says Jack Manson, an exercise
physiologist and personal trainer at the Elmwood Fitness Center,
part of the Ochsner Clinic Foundation in New Orleans. "The
preachers ultimately have a great influence over their flock."
If the pastor places an emphasis on
fitness, so will the congregation. "With something like gospel
aerobics, you've got pastors supporting and encouraging this physical
component of your life, which ultimately results in better health
and a cleaner mind and spirit," says Manson, whose own church
has an exercise program.
There is a downside to programs like
gospel aerobics, Manson points out. For one thing, you're getting
all different levels in one group, meaning that some women will
be - literally - dancing circles around the others. You also may
not have an organized way to keep track of people's progress,
something that's essential to motivation and success.
Jordan says other obstacles may
be unique to the black community. "The average African-American
woman doesn't want to wear a size five or six, and three is out
of the question," she says. "Even when they're at their
correct weight, they want to gain weight to have bigger hips or
larger breasts. Men wanted something they could hold on to."
In Africa, Jordan says, women stuffed
their clothing with pillows because if you had voluptuous hips
it meant you were more fertile. "Women think, 'If I look
good, then that means I'm healthy,'" Jordan says. "That's
another challenge, convincing them that looking good and being
healthy are not the same thing."
Additional Information
For more information and resources
on minority health, visit the Office
of Minority Health at the Department of Health and Human Services,
the Minority
Health Network or the CDC's Minority
Health Program.
Reference
Source 101
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
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