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Highlights
Goals & Measures
More Information
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Health Innovations
Boston Metro Innovations
  |  | | | Contact Information | Friedman School of Nutrition
Tufts University
150 Harrison Ave.
Boston, MA 02111 |
| | Innovation | | An integrated community-based approach to reducing obesity in school children. | | | Description | The "Shape Up Somerville" program grew out of a collaboration between the Tufts University Friedman School of Nutrition Science and its neighboring community of Somerville, Massachusetts. Together, they set a precedent in community responsiveness to childhood obesity. A study published in the journal Obesity found that after the first year of the effort, Somerville children were leaner that those in the neighboring control communities. As stated in a cover story on The Wall Street Journal, "The Somerville study is believed to be the first controlled experiment demonstrating the value of a community wide effort". The obesity reduction program targets children in the first to third grades and includes an elaborate array of community-based "interventions" designed to challenge children and help make them more health aware. The interventions take place through partnerships that increase opportunities for physical activity and healthy eating, specifically fruits, vegetables, legumes, low-fat dairy and whole grain products throughout the children's day and include:
* School Food Service - educating children about fruits and vegetables, improving menus
* In-School Curriculum - incorporating "Healthy Eating and Active Time" (HEAT) into the curriculum
* After-School Curriculum - six after-school programs on nutrition including trips to an organic farm
* Parent/Community Outreach - newsletters and educational materials to parents, PTA, local media
* Restaurants - 20 restaurants in Somerville are now "Shape-Up Approved" by offering healthy menu options
* Walkability/Safe Routes to School - safer crossing points were designed, with more bike racks at schools |
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  | | Universal Health Care in Massachusetts | |
 | | | Contact Information | Executive Office of Health and Human Services
One Ashburton Place, 11th Floor
Boston, MA 02108
617-573-1600 |
| | Innovation | | A new initiative makes Massachusetts the first state in the nation to implement universal health care. | | | Description | In 2006 Massachusetts became the first state in the United States to enact a health care program that effectively creates a system of universal coverage. The precedent-setting initiative accomplishes the goal by requiring insurance for all adults and by apportioning costs among the government, businesses, and individuals. The plan blends aspects of various health care reform proposals, and is anticipated to enroll 515,000 residents, fully 95% of the uninsured population, by 2008. The plan will help eliminate $100s of millions in federal Medicaid payments resultant from uninsured residents, and is expected to be self sufficient in 3 years. It is already a model for other states.
Highlights
* Sliding scale costs for individuals with incomes between 100 and 300 percent of the poverty level
* Individuals and small businesses can buy insurance with pretax dollars, which can affect savings of 25%
* Incentives to insurance companies to offer stripped-down plans at lower cost
* Lower-cost basic plans will be available to people ages 19 to 26
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  | | Creating Solutions to Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities | |
 | | | Contact Information | Boston Public Health Commission
1010 Massachusetts Avenue
Boston, MA 02118
(617) 534-5395 |
| | Innovation | | Providing a citywide blueprint to tackle health disparities. | | | Description | | Mayor Thomas M. Menino's Boston Disparities Project, unveiled in 2003, makes Boston among the first cities in the United States to establish a working blueprint for addressing racial and ethnic disparities in health. Recent scholarship and health studies have pointed to the increasing severity of health disparities between people of color and white residents. Racial and ethnic residents are more likely to have high blood pressure, diabetes, HIV, prostate cancer, asthma, lead poisoning, and other harmful diseases than their white counterparts. In an effort to tackle these public health inequities, the Disparities Project has put forth an ambitious blueprint of grants, advocacy projects, policy recommendations, and public-private collaborations to combat both the structural determinants and ultimate outcomes of poor health for ethnic and minority populations in Boston. |
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   | | A Prescription for Community Wellness | |
 | | | Contact Information | 1452 Dorchester Avenue
Dorchester, MA 02122
(617) 474-1494 |
| | Innovation | | DotWell is recognized as a model program for integrating clinical and non-clinical services at community health centers in response to the complex needs of a diverse urban community while realizing significant cost savings. | | | Description | DotWell defines health as community wellness--strong families, clean air, good schools, safe neighborhoods, and a vibrant economy. DotWell is a collaborative effort between the Codman Square Health Center (CSHC) and the Dorchester House Multi-Service Center (DHMSC) to guarantee high-quality clinical and community services across sites. The two health centers founded DotWell to provide them with infrastructure and support to reduce operating costs so that they could afford to offer innovative programs and initiatives beyond the exam room, address the needs of the whole person, family, adn community. In addition to providing administrative services to CSHC and DHMSC, DotWell supports cross-site public health programs that link clinicians with community organizers and educators. It also provides leadership and management to community service programs that operate out of the health centers, ranging from technology training and access, civic engagement, environmental health, HIV/AIDS outreach and care-management, parenting programs and after-school programs.
* Offers services to over 41,000 Dorchester residents per year
* Public health programs include Asthma and Diabetes Case Management and the Breast Health Initiative
* Civic health programs include The First Generation College Bound Program, home-buying classes, and community walking groups |
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   | | Streamlining Access to Social and Medical Services | |
.jpg) | | | Contact Information | Executive Office of Health and Human Services
One Ashburton Place, 11th Floor
Boston, MA 02108
(617) 573-1600 |
| | Innovation | | Using an electronic outreach system to increase low-income families' access to social and medical services. | | | Description | | In 2004, Massachusetts implemented a new website creating a one-stop portal for citizens seeking to tap into the state's complex network of social and medical services. The Massachusetts Human Services Online website helps to increase low-income families' access to social and medical services. The website screns for applicants' eligibility and steers them toward appropriate programs, allowing them to fill out a single application form for many services. |
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National/International Innovations
  | | No Trans Fats in the Big Apple | |
 | | | Contact Information | | New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene |
| | Innovation | | The first US city to mandate the ban of trans fats in public restaurants and food service providers. | | | Description | | In an effort to tackle obesity and heart disease among its residents, New York City became the first US city to ban the use of all artificial trans fats in restaurants and other food service establishments. Unlike other natural fatty acids, artificial trans fats are neither required for human nutrition nor beneficial, and have recently been considered a major cause of heart disease with no safe levels recommended for the human diet. According to New York City Department of Health, trans fats are responsible for more New Yorker deaths than motor vehicle crashes. The ban requires that by 2008 all foods prepared in NYC establishments must have less than 0.5 grams of trans fat per serving. In a city where dining out is a popular activity, the NYC Health Code hopes the ban will create a safer, healthier environment for all NYC citizens and visitors. |
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   | | Using Systems Thinking To Redesign School Lunches | |
 | | | Contact Information | Center for Ecoliteracy
2528 San Pablo Avenue
Berkeley, CA 94702
email:info@ecoliteracy.org |
| | Innovation | | Putting school lunch into the forefront of a learning environment. | | | Description | | The Rethinking School Lunch (RSL) program was designed to challenge the traditional approach to school lunch planning used across America. Through an integrated approach that combines campus gardens, kitchen classrooms, and a wide range of academic subjects, the program uses a systems thinking approach to address the crisis in childhood obesity. The Center for Ecological Learning spent five years researching 10 interrelated dimensions of school lunches--including procurement, food and health, food policy, waste management, and curriculum integration--and then used their findings to implement a school lunch program that treats childhood obesity, nutrition related illness, school lunch quality, and a child's ability to learn as related issues. Rather than treating lunch time as an afterthought, the RSL program "recognizes that lunchroom experiences (including poor-quality meals, shortened lunch periods, commercial messages, and excessive packaging and waste) can be a 'hidden curriculum' that undermines classroom lessons about nutrition and health." |
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  | | Instant Access to Medical Interpreters | |
 | | | Contact Information | CyraCom International
7330 North Oracle Road
Tucson, AZ 85704
(800) 713-4950 |
| | Innovation | | Instantly connecting doctors with qualified medical interpreters speaking over 150 languages. | | | Description | CyraCom International's new product, Voice Activated Language Selection, allows health care professionals to speak the name of a language into their telephone receiver and be instantly connected to a trained medical interpreter. The service enables health care professionals to save crucial minutes in getting diagnoses and treatment because access to qualified medical interpreters is quicker. This technology will help also to end miscommunication with non-English speaking patients and ensure that they receive immediate attention.
* Access service through dual-handset Cyraphone(r) that connects to a network of interpreters
* Interpreters fluent in 150 languages and are on call 24 hours a day, 7 days a week
* Relationships with over 600 hospitals and healthcare networks
* Costs average $20 per call
* Cyracom is serving over 900 hospitals in 2007 |
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  | | Improving access to HIV/AIDS anti-retroviral therapy | |
 | | | Contact Information | PointCare Technologies Inc.
181 Cedar Hill Street
Marlborough , MA 01752 |
| | Innovation | | Creating a portable and cheap immune system tester for HIV/AIDS treatment in rural clinics. | | | Description | | PointCare Technologies, a Massachusetts-based organization, is helping to improve access to HIV/AIDS anti-retroviral therapy around the world. Although anti-retroviral therapy has been proven to help reduce the impact of HIV/AIDS and improve the health of those living with the disease, it has yet to be fully deployed. One of the reasons for the partial deployment lies in the need to accurately test the immune system status of the patient at the time of treatment. In contrast to other immune testing systems designed for well-controlled laboratory environments, PointCare Technologies' new Portable Immune System Tester can be used in the most remote rural clinics--even those without electricity. The Portable Immune System tester needs only a car battery for power, can withstand high temperatures, and is durable enough to survive the rigors of transportation, storage, and shipping. |
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  | | Music Videos to Promote Young Women's Health | |
| | Innovation | | Addressing a deeply rooted practice that harms the health of women in Mali, the Healthy Tomorrow Campaign is producing music videos with renowned artists and community leaders to promote the cessation of female excision. | | | Description | A major, but often ignored, cause of illness, death, and HIV transmission affecting girls around the world is that of excision, or female genital mutilation (FGM). An estimated 85 to 110 million women and girls alive today have undergone FGM worldwide, with the majority being in Africa. Many of these young woman and girls will experience infertility, illness or death as a result. One small non-profit based in Somerville, Massachusetts, but with operations in Mali, Africa, is creatively addressing the deeply-rooted cultural practice with music, dance, and even humor, to affect country-wide changes. The Sini Sanuman (Healthy Tomorrow) project, started by Somerville resident Susan McLucas has been operational in Mali since 2001 and has already created a growing movement and frank discussions against the practice of FGM unthinkable a decade ago. The program works by producing music videos that feature famous Malian performers singing and dancing with real village leaders and former excisers in songs composed specifically to build the campaign against FGM.
* The music videos are produced in the 8 languages common in Mali and shown on local and national television * A Pledge Against Excision signature campaign currently has signatures from over 100 excisers and 30,000 citizens across Mali * One spin-off project called The Club of Whole Women -- women who have *not* been excised, were recently featured on national radio. In previous years, such a broadcast would have been unthinkable
* A movie theater on a truck, "Cinema Numerique Ambulante" (Moving Digital Theater), brings the videos to remote villages |
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   |  | | | Contact Information | Sumitomo Chemical
info@sumivector.com |
| | Innovation | | Chemically created long lasting mosquito nets are providing a new weapon in the fight against Malaria. | | | Description | | Sumitomo Chemical is leading the way in the production of long-lasting, chemically-treated plastic mosquito nets used to protect the millions of people exposed to malaria transmitting mosquitoes. In a cost-effective, practical manner, the nets help people shield themselves from mosquitoes without the use of harmful traditional pesticides. Although an afterthought in much of the global North, Malaria is estimated to kill over 3,000 children a day in Sub-Saharan Africa alone. Simple, cost-effective technologies such as Sumitomo's mosquito nets have the potential to improve the health of much of the world's population. |
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  |  | | | Contact Information | World Headquarters
35 Getty Avenue, Building 400
Paterson, NJ 07503 |
| | Innovation | | Taking Telemedcicine to the world's remotest hospitals and clinics. | | | Description | | In an effort to improve the quality of medical care available to children throughout the world, Medical Missions for Children (MMC) conceived the Global Telemedince and Teaching Network (GTTN). The network uses state-of-the-art technology to link health care professionals in the developed world with patients and health professionals in the most remote parts of the developing world. Cooperating hospitals are linked virtually with doctors and medical professionals around the globe, providing them with access to specialized health care and improving the quality of diagnoses and treatment. In addition, the GTTN produces and broadcasts a wide variety of medical training materials that can be used by developing world hospitals and medical centers to improve the capacity of health professionals. The net result is a lower level of misdiagnoses, and a higher level of appropriate treatments for even the most remote, low-income populations. |
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  |  | | | Contact Information | | http://www.konami.com/ |
| | Innovation | | Using interactive video game technology to promote healthy exercise practices in youth. | | | Description | | The latest tool in the drive to confront rising rates of obesity among America's youth (and the coming wave of preventable chronic diseases that it will trigger) comes from an unlikely source: a video game manufacturer. Dance Dance Revolution, a product ofKonami Entertainment, is an interactive video game exercise unit that is now being used in households, arcades, and even Physical Education curricula to improve the exercise habits of children. The Dance Dance Revolution (DDR) system utilizes an electronic map and a television screen to simulate high energy dance routines, which are replicated by students. The students' movements are recorded by the video game system's computer to measure how well the player can match the simulated dance routines. The result is a hip, individualized aerobic exercise that blends music, technology, and physical activity. Hundreds of schools in more than 10 states are now using the system, recognizing its popularity and its ability to generate excitement about exercise. For example, West Virginia, a state with one of the worst obesity rates in the nation, has begun to phase the system into its formal physical education program, and has even commissioned its own study to measure the impacts ofDDR on obesity rates in schools. |
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