The Wellmark Foundation Funds 12 Mini-Grants in Iowa and South Dakota
June 20, 2007
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Contact:
Angela Feig
515.245.4551
feigab@wellmark.com
(Des Moines, Iowa) –The Wellmark Foundation funded 12 mini-grant
requests totaling $107,320 to improve the health status of Iowans and South
Dakotans. Organizations receiving awards in the funding priority areas
of depression, diabetes and health literacy were:
- Avera Health Foundation received a $7,400 grant for development
of a diabetes education project in LeMars, Iowa. Floyd Valley Hospital,
in partnership with the elementary schools in LeMars and Remsen,
Iowa, will develop a diabetes education and awareness program targeting
children
in grades 2 – 4. Strategies will include classroom presentations,
games and written materials.
- The Burgess Foundation in Onawa, Iowa,
was awarded $8,371 to develop a diabetes education, management
and prevention project. Burgess
Health will partner with local libraries to launch a public campaign
and community program, including a display, resource kits, books, videos,
magazines and cookbooks.
- The Elderbridge Agency on Aging in Mason City,
Iowa, received $8,304 to develop and implement a type 2 diabetes
prevention and maintenance
program for older adults. The program, which incorporates physical
activity, nutrition and lifestyle education components, will be piloted
at the
Gowrie Congregate Meal Center.
- Harrisdale Homestead Educational and
Research Center in Atlantic, Iowa, received a $10,000 grant to develop
a type 2 diabetes prevention
awareness program targeting children in kindergarten through 5th grade.
The program will be piloted in the Atlantic Community Schools and will
be expanded to all elementary schools in Cass County. Strategies will
include community gardens and the development of walking school bus
routes.
- The Indigenous Diabetes Education Alliance (IDEA) in Rapid City,
SD, received $8,850 in grant funds to implement a diabetes education
prevention program. The IDEA will conduct a series of monthly after-school
seminars to educate Native American youth on the importance of nutrition,
exercise and making healthy lifestyle choices. The seminars will be
presented in formats that are culturally sensitive to Native American
customs and
traditions.
- The Iowa Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics will
use a $10,000 grant to begin expansion of Iowa’s Reach Out and
Read (ROR) Program to all 12 Community Health Centers in the state.
ROR-Iowa serves approximately 30,000 children across the state. The
expansion
will eventually provide books, literacy counseling and enhanced health
literacy skills to an additional 12,000 high-risk children and their
families.
- The Iowa Health Foundation in Des Moines received a $10,000
grant for a program to reduce, prevent and stop childhood obesity and
its co-morbidities. The Center for Advocacy and Outreach at Blank Children’s
Hospital will utilize the funds to develop the school-based program,
which will focus on healthy lifestyle choices regarding diet, exercise,
media awareness and health maintenance.
- The Iowa Natural Heritage Foundation
received a $6,000 grant to develop a statewide diabetes and physical
fitness project. The project
will establish the framework for a community survey to increase physical
activity on recreation trails in Iowa. This project will serve as the
first step toward future collaboration between recreation trail developers
and the health care community.
- Iowa Partners: Action for Healthy Kids,
Inc. was awarded a $10,000 grant to provide mini-grants to 20 participating
youth who attend Youth
Empowered Ambassadors for Health (YEAH!), a statewide summit that engages
Iowa youth as ambassadors for school health and wellness. The mini-grants
will increase the health literacy of youth, help them develop leadership
skills, and empower them to work with teacher sponsors to advocate
for healthier school environments.
- The Sibley-Ocheyedan Community School
District in Iowa was awarded $8,580 to implement a 12-month depression
education program as part of
an ongoing community-wide initiative, Project HOPE (Helping Others
by Preventative Education). The program will include free educational
seminars
for health care, law enforcement and public health professionals, as
well as teachers, parents, students and the general public in the district.
- The
Sioux Falls Area Community Foundation was awarded a $9,920 grant
to continue a diabetes and health literacy initiative underway
in Sioux Falls, SD. The next phases will provide parents/guardians,
grandparents and child care providers with information to encourage
healthy feeding
of young children in South Dakota.
- The University of South Dakota will
use a $9,895 grant to conduct a health literacy assessment among
rural and underserved populations
in South Dakota. Results will be presented to the South Dakota Academy
of Family Physicians to provide context for further discussion and
refinement of health literacy assessment efforts, with the ultimate
goal of improving
health literacy among these South Dakota populations.
The Wellmark Foundation has provided more than $12.16 million to fund
363 health-related grants in Iowa and South Dakota since 1997, including
a total of $1,243,864 to date in 2007.
The
Wellmark Foundation is a private, non-profit foundation created by Wellmark,
Inc., doing business as Wellmark Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Iowa.
Visit The Wellmark Foundation's Web site at www.wellmark.com/foundation for a list of grant recipients and grant application instructions. Capacity-building
grants are due September 12, 2007. Wellmark Blue Cross and Blue Shield
and The Wellmark Foundation are independent licensees of the Blue Cross
and Blue Shield Association. |