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Bootheel and Ozark Heart
Health Projects
These projects are coalition-based efforts to reduce chronic
diseases by training local coalitions to help people in
Bootheel and Ozark communities stop smoking, improve diet,
and increase physical activity.
Background
In 1989, the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services
(MDHSS) entered into a cooperative agreement with the CDC
to launch the Bootheel Heart Health Project in southeast
Missouri. The goal was to reduce illness and death from
cardiovascular disease by helping local communities form
Heart Health coalitions, which in turn help residents decrease
smoking, increase exercise, eat more healthfully, and check
blood cholesterol levels. Results were encouraging, showing
significant increases in the number of people who exercise
and check cholesterol levels. In 1994, the Prevention Research
Center (PRC) at Saint Louis University was founded. The
PRC’s main research project, the Ozark Heart Health
study, was patterned after the Bootheel project with Bootheel
project staff working in close partnership with Ozark study
staff.
Mission
To prevent death and disability from chronic disease in
under-served Missouri communities by:
- Promoting healthy lifestyles
- Performing research projects
- Applying research findings locally
Priority Populations
Missouri rural communities in the:
- Bootheel
A 4-county area along the Missouri River flood plain;
predominantly African-American
- Ozarks
An adjoining 8-county area in the Ozark Mountains; predominantly
Caucasian
Role of the Missouri
Department of Health & Senior Services
The MDHSS is strongly linked to the Prevention Research
Center, and our staffs collaborate on research development,
implementation and analysis:
- The Director of the Division of Chronic Disease Prevention
and Health Promotion serves as co-investigator on the
core research study, Coalition-Based Efforts to Reduce
Chronic Diseases
- MDHSS staff are members of the Prevention Center community
advisory board
- Local research and education activities in rural communities
are coordinated by a MDHSS team from Jefferson City and
Poplar Bluff
The success of PRC research projects would not be possible
without the committed teamwork developed between PRC researchers
and key administrators in the MDHSS. This collaborative
relationship has strengthened the public health infrastructure
in the state of Missouri through public health research,
education, and service.
Primary
Outcomes
The coalitions aim to bring about changes in the three major
modifiable risk factors for cardiovascular disease (CVD)
- smoking, sedentary behavior and diet.
Intermediate Environmental and Policy Objectives
- Establish local clean indoor air ordinances that severely
restrict smoking in public places in at least 50% of communities
in intervention areas.
- Establish comprehensive local ordinances prohibiting
tobacco sales to minors in at least 50% of communities
in intervention areas.
- Establish comprehensive smoke-free schools policies
in all school districts in intervention areas.
- Establish school lunch nutrition policies that lead
to reduced fat consumption and increased fruit and vegetable
consumption in all school districts in intervention areas.
- Establish community walking trails in at least 50%
of communities in intervention areas.
- Establish exercise clubs in all intervention areas.
- Increase health professional activities in counseling
and referral for smoking cessation, diet modification,
and initiation and maintenance of physical activity in
intervention areas by 100%.
Accomplishments
Please click on the title 'Accomplishments' to
open an Adobe
Reader file listing the accomplishments of the Bootheel
and Ozark Heart Health projects.
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