Thursday, May 9, 2013 04:03pm
KINS
September 8th, 2010

COE researchers receive grant to reduce childhood obesity

Writer: Terry Marie Hastings, 706/542-5941, thasting@uga.edu
Contact: Bryan McCullick, 706/542-3621, bamccull@uga.edu

Published in KINS, Press Releases, Research

This fall in Athens-Clarke County, Phillip Tomporowski and Bryan McCullick, professors in the department of kinesiology in UGA’s College of Education, and Catherine Davis, a clinical health psychologist at the Medical College of Georgia, will begin a project to introduce fun and effective exercise games into the Clarke County Schools after-school program curriculum.

University of Georgia researchers recently received funding to find ways to prevent or reduce childhood obesity, a health crisis of epidemic proportions in Georgia, through partnerships among University System of Georgia institutions and local communities.
Three of the four projects funded by the University System of Georgia are headed by or include UGA researchers including three College of Education faculty members. Two projects aim to reduce childhood obesity by working with after-school programs, while a third aims to reduce obesity in newborns by reaching pregnant and post-partum women through local obstetricians.
“Broad-based community partnerships have the potential to be more effective and more sustainable than other approaches in addressing childhood obesity,” said David Lee, UGA vice president for research.
“With faculty experts in nutrition, school exercise programs, health-risk communications, the use of new media to better communicate with youth, health policies, and assessment of intervention methods, UGA is in a unique position to join with our state’s communities to develop, implement and evaluate obesity prevention efforts,” he said.
Georgia ranks as the third worst in the nation with one third of children overweight or obese. That figure is expected to grow to almost half of all children by 2018.
But obesity is not about body weight alone, said Lee. “It translates into chronic disease – heart disease, hypertension and diabetes – and that’s a huge burden on our health care system.”
The current annual direct healthcare costs associated with obesity in Georgia is $2.5 billion, and the projected increases in obesity will bring the direct costs to $11 billion by 2018.

McCullick

This fall in Athens-Clarke County, Phillip Tomporowski and Bryan McCullick, professors in the department of kinesiology in UGA’s College of Education, and Catherine Davis, a clinical health psychologist at the Medical College of Georgia, will begin a project to introduce fun and effective exercise games into the Clarke County Schools after-school program curriculum.
Previous research by Tomporowski and Davis demonstrated the cognitive benefits of vigorous exercise programs among overweight school-age children. But the appropriate instructional conditions also must be present, said McCullick.
Historically, said McCullick, teachers have not received the workplace conditions and continued professional development they need to effect changes in children’s physical activity. “It’s led to school environments that may impede, rather than facilitate, children’s engagement in health-promoting levels of physical activity,” he said.

Tomporowski

In addition, physical education and physical activity during the school day have been cut back over the last decade. However, said Tomporowski, after-school programs present opportunity. “With preparation, after-school teachers can motivate children to be physically active and engage in games that are of the intensity and duration to reap health benefits.”
In a second project, researchers will work through YMCA after-school programs in Colquitt County and with the Healthy Colquitt Coalition to increase children’s physical activity, healthy eating habits, and family involvement – all known strategies for reducing childhood obesity.
The researchers are working with UGA’s Archway Program, one of eight programs in the state through which the university lends its expertise to address problems identified by the community.
“Because obesity is a complex issue, we need to work with, rather than in, the community,” said Marsha Davis, associate professor health promotion and behavior in UGA’s College of Public Health. In addition to Davis, project researchers include Archway Partnership director Mel Garber; Emily Watson, Archway Professional in Colquitt County; and Frances McCarty of the Institute of Public Health, Georgia State University.
In Statesboro, a third project will use the Internet and social media to encourage physical activity in women during pregnancy and after they have delivered their babies. Research has shown a critical link exists between childhood obesity and the prenatal health behaviors and gestational weight gain of the mother, yet only a third of U.S. women gain weight within the recommended range during pregnancy, and less than a quarter meet minimum daily exercise recommendations.
Michael Schmidt, assistant professor in UGA’s kinesiology department, said, “There’s growing evidence that technological learning and social media are as effective as traditional programs for increasing physical activity. This study is aimed at young women who are entering childbearing years and are comfortable with these ways of learning.”
Schmidt’s collaborators are Bridget Melton and Helen Graf of Georgia Southern University’s department of health and kinesiology, and Elaine Marshall, professor of nursing at Georgia Southern; W. Kent Guion, associate professor of physical therapy and graduate studies, Medical College of Georgia; and James Hiller, obstetrician and gynecologist, East Georgia Regional Medical Center.

For more information on Georgia Obesity Research visit:
www.gaobesityresearch.org/

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