Action Areas:
Engaging in Healthy Habits
Investing in Prevention
Promoting Community Health
Key Healthiest State Measures:
Physical Activity
Proper Nutrition
Public Health System Investment
In today's fast-paced society, our lack of time for daily exercise and the convenience
of unhealthy foods have led to an overwhelming prevalence of obesity and preventable
diseases. To promote healthy eating and active living, the Washington Health Foundation
supports policies that change the environments where people spend the majority of
their day, including schools, workplaces and communities.
We urge state government to make available to all businesses the tools it uses to
implement evidence based employee wellness programs. We encourage private employers
to create incentives for employee wellness.
In schools, we support funding for physical education, school nurses and other health
staffing, together with accountability for schools to begin implementing the Coordinated
School Health Model. In the community, we support voluntary action by restaurants
to offer more healthy choices, and to improve menu labeling, and we support a clearer
role for public health in land use planning processes, transportation policy and
more to promote walk-able and and bike-able communities.
Finally, to the extent taxes or other limitations on saturated fats, high fructose
corn syrup or other unhealthy foods or specific funding "set asides" for
more healthful building or transportation alternatives may be more effective than
incentives, policy makers should consider such options.
Background & Summary:
Healthy Eating & Active Living Summary
& Background
Giving Everyone the Health of the Educated: An Examination of Whether Social
Change Would Save More Lives Than Medical Advances
Higher mortality rates among individuals with inadequate education reflect
a complex causal pathway and the influence of confounding variables. Formidable
efforts at social change would be necessary to elimination disparities, but the
changes would save more lives than would society's current heavy investment in medical
advances. Spending large sums of money on such advances at the expense of social
change may be jeopardizing public health.
http://www.whf.org/documents/health&education.pdf
[4.91 MB]
School Nutrition Association Report
School boards nationwide have approved student wellness policies that include such
key characteristics as more nutrition education, mandatory recess and additional
nutrition standards for foods and beverages available outside the school cafeteria,
according to "A Foundation for the Future II," a new study by the School
Nutrition Association (SNA). SNA analyzed the local wellness policies approved by
140 school districts in 49 states.
http://www.schoolnutrition.org/uploadedFiles/SchoolNutrition.org/
News_&_Publications/School_Foodservice_News/ New_Folder/Regional LWP Report.pdf
2007 Washington State Legislative Bill Watch:
|
HB 1188 |
Requiring physical activity opportunities every school day. |
HB 1550 /
SB 5438 |
Creating the Washington community learning center program. |
|
SHB 1588 |
Providing mobility education to students in driver training programs. |
SHB 1677 /
SB 5265 |
Creating the outdoor education and recreation grant program for schools and others. |
HB 1872 /
SSB 5841 |
Enhancing student learning opportunities and achievement. |
|
SSB 5665 |
Establishing the state employee health program and a state employee health demonstration
project. |
|
SB 5415
|
Creating health advisory councils. |