PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Pennington Biomedical's Greaux Healthy Initiative takes aim at childhood obesity

Launch coincides with Childhood Obesity Awareness month; Campaign to share Pennington Biomedical research-sourced educational resources with physicians, educators, and families

Pennington Biomedical's Greaux Healthy Initiative takes aim at childhood obesity
2024-09-04
(Press-News.org) Pennington Biomedical Research Center is formally launching Greaux Healthy, a public service initiative designed to help improve kids’ health at every age. Developed with funding from the State of Louisiana, Greaux Healthy implements 35 years of Pennington Biomedical research and discoveries to inform tools, resources and programing for children, parents, physicians and educators throughout the state.  

The Greaux Healthy initiative is developing a wide variety of educational materials distinctly tailored to four priority populations, including expectant families and parents of infants, preschool age children, school age children, and adolescents and young adults. In its inaugural year, Greaux Healthy is partnering with 4th grade classrooms in Caddo and East Baton Rouge parishes, providing classroom lessons and educational materials addressing childhood obesity, with more parishes and school systems to come.  

"Greaux Healthy is committed to being the most trusted partner in the prevention and treatment of childhood obesity,” said Melissa Martin, Greaux Healthy Director. “Every product, resource, and tool we offer has been developed from research conducted at Pennington Biomedical over the past 35 years. Our evidence-based resources are designed to help Louisiana families navigate the unique path for their own health or the health of children in their lives.” 

The rate of Louisiana youth with obesity is nearly 22 percent, five percentage points higher than the national average. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has designated September as National Childhood Obesity Awareness Month in the United States, and the launch of Greaux Healthy in Louisiana demonstrates that Pennington Biomedical and the State of Louisiana see the epidemic of childhood obesity as a major issue among residents. 

“The Greaux Healthy initiative is an articulation of Pennington Biomedical’s mission of ‘cells to society’ as each component of the initiative is grounded in more than three decades of research conducted by our world-renowned researchers,” said Dr. John Kirwan, Executive Director of Pennington Biomedical. “With the goal of addressing the childhood obesity crisis across the nation, Greaux Healthy equips expectant parents, families, educators, healthcare professionals and community leaders with tools that can be tailored to their specific need.” 

In schools, the recommended implementation of the Greaux Health program includes a school-wide promotion of healthy behaviors, PE lessons with instant activities and take-home newsletters, and classroom lessons with corresponding activity books. Greaux Healthy will expand its program implementation to 5th grade classes in the 2024-25 school year, with the goal of ultimately providing classroom resources from 4th through 8th grades.  

“For years we have been building a library of evidence-based prevention and treatment for childhood obesity, and Greaux Healthy is a major initiative to put our findings into action for the broader public,” said Dr. Peter Katzmarzyk, Principal Investigator and Chief Science Officer for Greaux Healthy, and Director of Pennington Biomedical’s Population and Public Health Division. “Health and nutrition at early stages, including in the embryonic stage, are shown to be major factors in health later in life. We aim these materials at children, their teachers and caregivers, and expectant mothers in order to see these children grow into healthy and active adults.”  

To reach Louisiana families outside of the school setting, Greaux Healthy is taking a bus tour to select areas of the state to showcase the initiative’s research component. The Pennington Generation Cohort study will partner with Louisiana families to learn more about how physical activity, nutrition, sleep habits and other factors affect children’s health and development. Participants in the study will answer health surveys once a year, receive health screenings at no cost, and learn more about their individual health profile 

Primarily informed by Pennington Biomedical obesity research, Greaux Healthy is overseen by an international scientific advisory board, with researchers representing Tufts University, Weight Watchers, Duke University School of Medicine, University of Ottawa, Columbia University, Temple University College of Public Health, and the University of Rochester Medical Center. The Greaux Healthy initiative was made possible through funding and partnership with the State of Louisiana.

About the Pennington Biomedical Research Center

The Pennington Biomedical Research Center is at the forefront of medical discovery as it relates to understanding the triggers of obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, cancer and dementia. The Center conducts basic, clinical, and population research, and is a campus of the LSU System. The research enterprise at Pennington Biomedical includes over 530 employees within a network of 44 clinics and research laboratories, and 13 highly specialized core service facilities. Its scientists and physician/scientists are supported by research trainees, lab technicians, nurses, dietitians, and other support personnel. Pennington Biomedical is a state-of-the-art research facility on a 222-acre campus in Baton Rouge. For more information, see www.pbrc.edu.

 

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Pennington Biomedical's Greaux Healthy Initiative takes aim at childhood obesity Pennington Biomedical's Greaux Healthy Initiative takes aim at childhood obesity 2 Pennington Biomedical's Greaux Healthy Initiative takes aim at childhood obesity 3

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Millions of people with diabetic foot ulcers could benefit from new research discovery

2024-09-04
Highlights:   Researchers from Michigan State University and South Shore Hospital in Massachusetts have uncovered a connection between two common diabetes drugs — insulin and metformin — identified in wound exudates of diabetic foot ulcers, which may improve their healing.   While analyzing wound exudate (the fluid the body moves and secretes to the site of an injury), researchers discovered the presence of metformin in patients who take the drug orally.   The researchers then explored metformin’s relationship ...

Adding anti-clotting drugs to stroke care ineffective, clinical trial finds

Adding anti-clotting drugs to stroke care ineffective, clinical trial finds
2024-09-04
Stroke patients who survive a blood clot in the brain’s blood vessels are prone to developing new blockages during their recovery periods, even if they receive vessel-clearing interventions. In an effort to avoid further clots, doctors at 57 sites around the U.S. tested a possible solution: the addition of anti-coagulant drugs to medicine that dissolves blood clots. But results from the clinical trial, led by Opeolu Adeoye, MD, head of the Department of Emergency Medicine at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, indicate two such drugs did not improve outcomes. The findings are available Sept. 4 in The New England Journal ...

Research Center awarded $14.4 million to advance new manufacturing solutions for microelectronics

Research Center awarded $14.4 million to advance new manufacturing solutions for microelectronics
2024-09-04
A new Energy Frontier Research Center (EFRC), supported by the Department of Energy’s Office of Science and led by SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, was awarded $14.4 million over four years to advance manufacturing of microelectronics by investigating approaches to building their components in fundamentally new ways.  Instead of moving electrons through conducting metallic interconnects in the miniscule and ever shrinking parts of devices such as microchips used in computers and cell phones, the researchers propose to move information via spin waves that can propagate through semiconductors ...

Notre Dame researchers create new tool to analyze embodied carbon in more than 1 million buildings in Chicago

Notre Dame researchers create new tool to analyze embodied carbon in more than 1 million buildings in Chicago
2024-09-04
The built environment — which includes the construction and operation of buildings, highways, bridges and other infrastructure — is responsible for close to 40 percent of the global greenhouse gas emissions contributing to climate change. While many building codes and benchmarks have focused on constructing “greener,” more energy-efficient new buildings, it is not enough to seek to reduce emissions in operations, said Ming Hu, the associate dean for research, scholarship and creative work in Notre Dame’s School of Architecture. Rather, policymakers and industry leaders ...

SMU researcher helps develop new technique to explore oceanic microbes

SMU researcher helps develop new technique to explore oceanic microbes
2024-09-04
DALLAS (SMU) – When SMU researcher Alexander Chase was a young boy, the sheer diversity of plants in Earth’s tropical rainforests fascinated him. He found himself wondering, what new species were out there, waiting to be unearthed? That curiosity is why Chase now collects samples from Earth’s oceans using a new technique called Small Molecule In situ Resin Capture (SMIRC), which could be the first step in uncovering compounds that lead to next-generation antibiotics. Microbial natural products come from microorganisms, or microbes, and account for many of today’s essential medicines, including most antibiotics. Microbes are too small to see without ...

New guideline for Helicobacter pylori includes change to primary treatment recommendation

2024-09-04
The American Journal of Gastroenterology has published a new guideline on the treatment of Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infection. The corresponding author on the guideline is William D. Chey, M.D., chief of the Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology at Michigan. H. pylori is a bacterium that infects over half the people in the world, though most are asymptomatic. It can cause dyspepsia, peptic ulcer disease and gastric cancer.  This latest clinical practice guideline notes that its prevalence in North America is decreasing, but it still infects 30-40% of the population. A previous guideline ...

Making desalination more efficient, by way of renewable energy

2024-09-04
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) — With freshwater becoming an ever scarcer resource, desalination of ocean water is increasingly employed to bridge the gap between supply and demand. However, desalination is energy-intensive, often powered by fossil fuels, so meeting the need for freshwater can exacerbate the challenge of reducing atmospheric CO2, the main driver of climate change. Yangying Zhu, an assistant professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at UC Santa Barbara, wants to address that conundrum. Now, a two-year, $500,000 seed grant from the Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E) ...

Preventing car battery fires with help from machine learning

Preventing car battery fires with help from machine learning
2024-09-04
One of the most critical safety concerns for electric vehicles is keeping their batteries cool, as temperature spikes can lead to dangerous consequences. New research led by a University of Arizona doctoral student proposes a way to predict and prevent temperature spikes in the lithium-ion batteries commonly used to power such vehicles.  The paper "Advancing Battery Safety," led by College of Engineering doctoral student Basab Goswami, is published in the Journal of Power Sources.  With the support of $599,808 from the Department of Defense's Defense Established Program to Stimulate Competitive Research, Goswami and his adviser, aerospace ...

Heavy metal cadmium may be tied to memory issues for some

2024-09-04
MINNEAPOLIS – The heavy metal cadmium, which is found in the air, water, food and soil, is known to cause health problems. A new study published in the September 4, 2024, online issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology, examined if thinking and memory skills were associated with cadmium exposure. They found no association when they looked at the group as a whole. However, when looking at Black and white people separately, it found cadmium may be tied to problems with thinking and memory skills in white people. ...

Strictest abortion-ban states offer least family support

Strictest abortion-ban states offer least family support
2024-09-04
View a breakdown of the abortion restrictions by state below States with early abortion bans are less likely to offer paid time off after childbearing, to give poor children nutritional support or to expand access to reproductive health care Marginalized people and those with low socioeconomic status are overrepresented in ban states and least likely to overcome the barriers that bans impose CHICAGO --- States with the most severe post-Dobbs abortion restrictions also have the fewest policies in place to support raising families, reports a new Northwestern Medicine study.  “We found that in the states that most severely ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

How do monkeys recognize snakes so fast?

Revolutionizing stent surgery for cardiovascular diseases with laser patterning technology

Fish-friendly dentistry: New method makes oral research non-lethal

Call for papers: 14th Asia-Pacific Conference on Transportation and the Environment (APTE 2025)

A novel disturbance rejection optimal guidance method for enhancing precision landing performance of reusable rockets

New scan method unveils lung function secrets

Searching for hidden medieval stories from the island of the Sagas

Breakthrough study reveals bumetanide treatment restores early social communication in fragile X syndrome mouse model

Neuroscience leader reveals oxytocin's crucial role beyond the 'love hormone' label

Twelve questions to ask your doctor for better brain health in the new year

Microelectronics Science Research Centers to lead charge on next-generation designs and prototypes

Study identifies genetic cause for yellow nail syndrome

New drug to prevent migraine may start working right away

Good news for people with MS: COVID-19 infection not tied to worsening symptoms

Department of Energy announces $179 million for Microelectronics Science Research Centers

Human-related activities continue to threaten global climate and productivity

Public shows greater acceptance of RSV vaccine as vaccine hesitancy appears to have plateaued

Unraveling the power and influence of language

Gene editing tool reduces Alzheimer’s plaque precursor in mice

TNF inhibitors prevent complications in kids with Crohn's disease, recommended as first-line therapies

Twisted Edison: Bright, elliptically polarized incandescent light

Structural cell protein also directly regulates gene transcription

Breaking boundaries: Researchers isolate quantum coherence in classical light systems

Brain map clarifies neuronal connectivity behind motor function

Researchers find compromised indoor air in homes following Marshall Fire

Months after Colorado's Marshall Fire, residents of surviving homes reported health symptoms, poor air quality

Identification of chemical constituents and blood-absorbed components of Shenqi Fuzheng extract based on UPLC-triple-TOF/MS technology

'Glass fences' hinder Japanese female faculty in international research, study finds

Vector winds forecast by numerical weather prediction models still in need of optimization

New research identifies key cellular mechanism driving Alzheimer’s disease

[Press-News.org] Pennington Biomedical's Greaux Healthy Initiative takes aim at childhood obesity
Launch coincides with Childhood Obesity Awareness month; Campaign to share Pennington Biomedical research-sourced educational resources with physicians, educators, and families