Michigan Breastfeeding Network Supports Businesses that Supports Working Families



The Michigan Breastfeeding Network (MIBFN) develops and supports education programs, materials, and conferences that encourage breastfeeding in Michigan (4.9% Latino). One method is through their MI Breastfeeding-Friendly Business Project initiative to recognize companies in compliance with the federal Break Time for Nursing Mothers legislation and celebrate employers that go above and beyond federal requirements to support families. MIFBFN recognizes newly awarded businesses and creates positive press to encourage current, and future employees, clients, patients, patrons, stakeholders, partners, and all of Michigan to support businesses that support working families. MIBFN provides a press release  to distribute to local media outlets; provides a sample article for the ...

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Univision Features Salud Heroes Can Do Houston



In the U.S. over 39% of Latino children are overweight or obese, according to Salud America!. With this in mind Can Do Houston, a nonprofit partnered with Houston ISD and the City of Houston’s Department of Park and Recreation to help kids stay physically active by taking them on a school bus from Briscoe Elementary School to Mason Park. Recently Univision highlighted their efforts as part of their Semana de la salud and interviewed Dr. Amelie Ramirez, director of Salud America!. Watch the video here. Read their story ...

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Latino Kids Need Your Help. Here’s How to Start.



Latino kids need your help. They have the nation's highest childhood obesity rate. They struggle to access healthy foods and drinks and physical activity. They are increasingly targeted by unhealthy food marketing. You're invited to join our free public webinar at 11 a.m. CST/ 12 p.m. EST on Tuesday, July 19, 2016, to get tools you can use to make a healthy change for Latino kids. The webinar—a partnership of Salud America! and Community Commons—will explore available resources, data, maps, case studies, and other tools that make it easy for you to start a healthy change to reduce Latino childhood obesity in your community. A healthy change can mean working with a local school to open playgrounds after school, pushing for policies that help new mothers to breastfeed their ...

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13 Effects of Fast Food on the Human Body



Latinos tend to live in neighborhoods with abundant fast food options and few sources of healthy, affordable foods, according to research by Salud America! at UT Health San Antonio (formerly SaludToday). What happens when you eat a lot of unhealthy food at restaurants? A new infographic by Healthline highlights 13 effects of eating highly processed, unhealthy food on the human body, including obesity: Fast food isn’t necessarily bad, but in many cases it’s highly processed and contains large amounts of carbohydrates, added sugar, unhealthy fats, and salt (sodium). These foods are often high in calories yet offer little or no nutritional value. When fast food frequently replaces nutritious foods in your diet, it can lead to poor nutrition, poor health, and weight gain. Tests in ...

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Keep Your Hydration in Mind on 4th of July



Today is America's favorite holiday, but, as you’re getting ready for the barbecues, picnics, and a fun at the pool or the beach, it’s important to keep your hydration in mind. Sweating during the sizzling heat of July can result in an increased loss of fluids. This can create a problem for our main bodily organs such as the heart, brain, and lungs. Our bodies are 2/3 water and water plays a pivotal role not just in making sure our organs function correctly, but also in removing toxins and waste from our bodies. Doctors recommend that adults drink 2-3 gallons of water a day to stay hydrated, especially during the summer months. Unfortunately at barbecues and picnics, it’s easier to grab sugar-rich vitamin water, sport drinks, or lemonade. For example, according to ...

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How to Fight for Walkable Neighborhoods



What can you do to bring walkable streets to your neighborhood? Follow the example of Nicolas Rivard and Allison Hu. Rivard and Hu, urban designers in San Antonio, noticed that a road construction project in a largely Latino neighborhood was lacking shade, trees, and other walkable streetscape elements because of cost issues. So they organized a multi-pronged effort with neighbors, business partnerships, storytelling, petitions, and more to mobilize support and suggest design-specific elements that could improve the road's walkability—an effort that paid off when the city agreed to add street trees, separated sidewalks, and other streetscape elements to the road. Their work is featured in a new Rivard Report article and Salud Heroes story by Amanda Merck of Salud America!, a ...

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WINNER: Sarah Ramirez and the Great Fruit Rescue



Fruit was in danger. It was falling off trees, rotting. Not nourishing people in desperate need of healthy food. So Sarah Ramirez, a health advocate in Tulare County, Calif., started a program to pick up unused fresh produce from yards and donate it to the food bank. It gets healthy fruits and veggies into the hands of locals who need them. Now Ramirez won the Salud America! #SaludHeroes video voting contest! Watch her winning video or read her story about how she took action after noticing poverty, hunger, and a lack of access to healthy food in her 60% Latino farming community where much freshly grown produce goes to waste. Ramirez's Be Healthy Tulare group researched and developed a volunteer program to glean fruit from local homes, and donated it the food bank, ...

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How to Make Space for Physical Activity



Physical activity can help raise a healthier generation of kids in San Antonio, where there is high risk of obesity, diabetes, and heart disease. Complete streets, playful neighborhoods, and greenways are a few new ways to help create opportunities for physical activity, according to a new article in The Rivard Report by Amanda Merck of Salud America!, a national Latino childhood obesity prevention network funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and based at the UT Health Science Center at San Antonio. Merck suggests the city connect with groups that are already working to make the healthy choice the easy choice. For example, she suggests the Active Living Council of San Antonio—a public-private partnership of policymakers, business leaders, school officials, program ...

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Study: Latinos Not Eating as Healthy as Whites



More Americans are eating healthier, but a widening nutrition gap is separating Whites from Latinos and African Americans, according to a new study, the L.A. Times reports. The study, which examined 34,000 U.S. adults' diets from 2000-2012, found that 46% of Americans had "poor" diets in 2012, an improvement from 56% in 2000. Researchers also found Americans made several positive gains: cutting sugary drink intake in half, nearly doubling consumption whole grain consumption, and boosting intake of nuts, seeds, fish, and shellfish. But Latinos and African Americans didn't improve as much. According to the L.A. Times: Non-Latino blacks and Mexican Americans — the only two minority ethnic groups to be studied in the latest effort — were significantly less likely to have ...

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