Healthier Arkansas

Division of Agriculture looks to make Arkansas healthier through DFEND program

By John Lovett
University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture
Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — It’s easier and cheaper than you may think to eat healthy, get exercise and de-stress. It just requires a little inspirational education, and maybe a little chair yoga after your taco bowl.

GOOD MEDICINE — University of Arkansas Honors College students who took part in the first Good Medicine course led by associate professors Jamie Baum and Erin Howie Hickey, center, include Mariam Abboud, Samad Akhter, Madison Bremer, Carson Chappell, Mary Kate Cheek, Mary Cowen, Caleb Flores, Max Green, Breyuna Harris, Katelyn Helberg, Kennedy Hicks, Lily Hiegel, James Schnoes Jr., Samantha Stark and Bailey Wheeler. (U of A System Division of Agriculture photo)

In the coming year, toolkits that provide education on nutrition and physical activity will make their way out to Arkansans through the Cooperative Extension Service as part of a University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture program supported by a nearly $1 million grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture.

“The toolkits are tailored to specific counties based on demographics and the requests from the extension agents in those counties, but many of the toolkits can be adapted for any location to provide coaching that can improve physical and mental health, and physical fitness,” said Jamie Baum, director of the Division of Agriculture’s Center for Human Nutrition and an associate professor in the food science department.

The four-year grant supports an integrated multimedia approach for the DFEND program, which stands for “Delivering Food, Exercise, and Nutrition education for prevention of chronic Diseases.” Baum and Erin Howie Hickey, associate professor of exercise science with the University of Arkansas’ College of Education and Health Professions, lead the program out of the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station and serve as Dean’s Faculty Fellows for the University of Arkansas Honors College.

Bryan Mader, assistant professor and health specialist for the family and consumer sciences department with extension, is a co-investigator on project. Xinya Liang, associate professor in the College of Education and Health Professions, also serves as co-investigator and statistician for the project.

Obesity and chronic disease are complex problems in the United States and are the results of many factors including unhealthy eating patterns, lack of physical activity, food insecurity and low health literacy, Baum said. Goals of the DFEND project, she added, are to improve health literacy related to nutrition and physical activity in adults at risk for chronic disease, as well as future health care professionals.

Part of DFEND’s goals are being carried out through the Good Medicine course for undergraduate students. The course was sponsored by the Honors College this semester and will be offered again in the fall 2024 semester as part of the USDA-NIFA grant.

Howie Hickey said that most of her undergraduate exercise students are on track to enter health care professions including medical doctors, physician assistants or physical therapists but may end up taking only one nutrition class and no exercise science classes throughout their degree plan. The Good Medicine course offers a well-rounded education on nutrition and physical activity, while serving the public with creation of the health toolkits, she said.

Toolkit presentations

University of Arkansas Honors College students, whose majors include biology, engineering, marketing and political science, were chosen for the first year of educational toolkit development in the Good Medicine class, which was supported by the University of Arkansas Honors College. The students made final presentations on their toolkits to Baum, Howie Hickey and extension agents on Dec. 5.

Extension agents offered a list of subjects for the three-person student teams to work on and then had meetings with them over the course of the semester. While the students could design the toolkits based on their project focus, they all had the same requirements that included social media posts and educational sessions for the general public.

A common theme among the five presentations was showing how physical fitness is tied to both physical and mental wellness. Even when sitting at an office chair, there are exercises one can do to decrease stress and stretch muscles called “chair yoga,” as shown in the “Budgeting Wellness” toolkit developed for adults.

One group of students offered examples of healthy meals, such as a taco bowl, that can serve four people and be made for about $10. Other quick-and-easy healthy snack food options like hummus and vegetables, Greek yogurt and berries, and fruit and cottage cheese were also presented.

A health education toolkit designed by students for Hempstead County focused on “physical activity and nutrition for diabetics in Arkansas,” P.A.N.D.A. for short. About 14 percent of the southwestern Arkansas county’s residents over the age of 20 have diabetes. Along with fact sheets on quick snacks, common misconceptions about diabetes and exercises to get blood pumping, the toolkit offered turnkey social media material for extension agents to reach target audiences.

Other examples of toolkits created by the students included information on anti-inflammatory foods, physical activities for kids and adults, and a program that teaches eighth-grade students to mentor fourth-grade students on healthy lifestyle choices.

Making games out of learning, like a scavenger hunt, was a part of the program for many of the toolkits.

The Honors College students who took part in the first Good Medicine course include Mariam Abboud, Samad Akhter, Madison Bremer, Carson Chappell, Mary Kate Cheek, Mary Cowen, Caleb Flores, Max Green, Breyuna Harris, Katelyn Helberg, Kennedy Hicks, Lily Hiegel, James Schnoes Jr., Samantha Stark and Bailey Wheeler.

Land-grant mission hat trick

Julie Robinson, associate professor of community, professional and economic development with the Cooperative Extension Service, noted the DFEND projects’ unique quality of incorporating all three land-grant missions: teaching, research and extension.

“The Good Medicine Honors Course is a great combination of all three missions of the land-grant system,” Robinson said. “The students take what they learn in class, the teaching mission, combined with research and information obtained through the research mission. The students then developed the content and materials presented during their final session, which fulfills the extension mission of the land grant mission — extending knowledge and information to all Arkansans to help them improve their quality of life.”

Working with the county extension agents to develop instructional materials was a “real-world experience” for students, Robinson added, providing the students with learning opportunities and challenges with community education.

To learn more about Division of Agriculture research, visit the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station website: https://aaes.uada.edu. Follow on Twitter at @ArkAgResearch. To learn more about the Division of Agriculture, visit https://uada.edu/. Follow us on Twitter at @AgInArk. To learn about extension programs in Arkansas, contact your local Cooperative Extension Service agent or visit www.uaex.uada.edu.

Blue & You Foundation for a Healthier Arkansas Awards UAMS 3 Grants To Improve Mental Health Treatment

By Tim Taylor

LITTLE ROCK — The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) recently received three grants from Arkansas Blue Cross and Blue Shield’s Blue & You Foundation for a Healthier Arkansas aimed at strengthening programs treating Arkansans with mental illness.

Jessica Coker, M.D., an associate professor in the UAMS College of Medicine’s Department of Psychiatry and the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, is the principal investigator in MAPS (Mental Health and Addiction Peer Support), a peer-support model for co-occurring substance use disorders within acute psychiatric units.

Supported by a $122,389 grant from the Blue & You Foundation for a Healthier Arkansas, Coker, along with Abigail Richison, M.D., will integrate a peer navigator assigned to the inpatient units at the UAMS Psychiatric Research Institute (PRI). The peer navigator will work specifically with patients dealing with substance use disorders.

https://news.uams.edu/2023/01/26/blue-you-foundation-for-a-healthier-arkansas-awards-uams-3-grants-to-improve-mental-health-treatment/

UA Cossatot was recently awarded $64,000 Blue & You Foundation Grant

UA Cossatot was recently awarded a $64,000 Blue & You Foundation Grant to provide hunger relief and hygiene items for students in need.

The grant will aid UA Cossatot’s Center for Student Success’s food pantries and supplies closet, located on three of their four campuses in Sevier, Howard, and Little River counties.

“Food insecurity and lack of resources on college campuses across America is a growing problem, and within the Center for Student Success, we want to do all that we can to alleviate hunger locally and meet these needs. We want students to come to college and focus solely on their academics and not where their next meal may come from,” said Erika Buenrrostro, Director of Student Success and Enrichment. “We are excited that UA Cossatot was chosen to receive this grant that will greatly benefit our students.”

The Blue & You Foundation for a Healthier Arkansas announced Wednesday that 47 grants are being awarded in 2023 to public schools, universities and nonprofit groups in Arkansas totaling $3.38 million. The grants will directly impact each of the state’s 75 counties, funding projects focused on:

· Behavioral health resources

· Social determinants of health

· Maternal and pediatric health needs

· Health equity

· Whole person health

· Medical condition innovation

“These grants will fund dozens of projects touching Arkansans all over the state — from supporting the Arkansas Suicide Prevention Hotline to providing recreational therapy to youth aging out of foster care, the 2023 grants will impact Arkansans in a powerful way.” said Rebecca Pittillo, executive director of the Blue & You Foundation. “The organizations that we have funded are focused on improving the lives of people in our communities, which is also our goal at the Blue & You Foundation.”

For more information, contact Erika Buenrrostro at 870-584-1133 or ebuenrrostro@cccua.edu

Blue & You Foundation awards $3.36 million to Arkansas Organizations including $150,000 to an Ashdown project

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (November 22, 2021) – The Blue & You Foundation for a Healthier Arkansas announced today 41 initiatives in Arkansas will receive grants totaling $3,360,327, that will directly impact 71 of Arkansas’ 75 counties.

Among the projects receiving a grant, is the Ashdown Community Foundation, Inc., Ashdown ($150,000) – to construct the Ashdown City Park Inclusive Playground.

The Blue & You Foundation is a charitable foundation established and funded by Arkansas Blue Cross and Blue Shield to promote better health in the Natural State.

“Eleven of our grants this year focus on education for medical professionals and eight grants address behavioral health, issues that are extremely important to the health of all Arkansans,” said Rebecca Pittillo, executive director of the Blue & You Foundation. “Ten of our grants will reach Arkansans statewide. And because we are very aware of the need for more health equity within our state, eight of our grants focus specifically on minority populations.”

The need for qualified healthcare workers and better access to behavioral health services continue to grow in Arkansas. According to the National Alliance on Mental Illness, one in five adults experiences mental illness. And according to the latest state report on healthcare licensures in Arkansas, there were seven counties in the state that only had one primary care physician in 2019, and several had no dentists.

“The Blue & You Foundation has been focused for the past two years on supporting urgent needs that arose due to the pandemic,” said Pittillo. “The COVID-19 pandemic definitely elevated new health-related needs and emphasized existing needs in our state – social determinants that we hope these grants will positively impact.”

“The Blue & You Foundation has been focused for the past two years on supporting urgent needs that arose due to the pandemic,” said Pittillo. “The COVID-19 pandemic definitely elevated new health-related needs and emphasized existing needs in our state – social determinants that we hope these grants will positively impact.”

Since 2001, the Blue & You Foundation has awarded more than $45 million to nonprofits and governmental agencies in all 75 counties. Applications for the next round of grants will be accepted April 15 through July 15, 2022. Grants will range from $5,000 to $150,000. Blue & You Foundation training sessions for grant writing will be offered in March of 2022. For more information on trainings and the Blue & You grant process, visit blueandyoufoundationarkansas.org.