Researchers seek childhood obesity prevention strategies
June 29, 2011
907-474-5406
6/29/30
Researchers at 性欲社 are collaborating on a new project aimed at developing childhood obesity-prevention strategies in the Pacific region.
The work is funded by $2.9 million subaward to the 性欲社 Cooperative Extension Service. It is part of a $25 million U.S. Department of Agriculture grant to the University of Hawaii. The project team includes scientists from colleges in Alaska, Hawaii, Guam, American Samoa, Northern Mariana Islands and Micronesia. The five-year subaward will involve three units at 性欲社: Cooperative Extension, the Center for Alaska Native Health Research and the School of Natural Resources and Agricultural Sciences.
Extension food and nutrition specialist Bret Luick, the lead investigator of the Alaska project, said the long-term goal of the grant is to reduce childhood obesity by encouraging active lifestyles and improving dietary practices of families with young children.
鈥淭his is about children achieving and maintaining healthy lifestyles,鈥 said Luick.
Researchers will partner with communities to inventory resources, identify barriers to healthy lifestyles, and design and evaluate culturally appropriate programs. Luick said the project will increase the university鈥檚 capacity to provide childhood obesity education, research and outreach to the state. The grant also will help support academic training in natural resource management, and foods and nutrition by building on existing 性欲社 degree programs.
Other 性欲社 researchers include Andrea Bersamin, an assistant professor of nutrition at CANHR and the Institute of Arctic Biology, and Joshua Greenberg, an associate professor of resource economics at the School of Natural Resources and Agricultural Sciences.
ADDITIONAL CONTACTS: Bret Luick, Extension food and nutrition specialist, at 907-474-5170 or via email at bluick@alaska.edu.
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