Program Doesn’t Preach To Church Members, Rather Involves Them in Setting Goals
Dr. Sara Wilcox of the Arnold School’s Department of Exercise Science is engaging a group of AME
churches in eastern and central South Carolina to promote physical activity and healthy eating among
congregants.
If the five-year program is successful, the church will encourage
use of it by all of the denomination’s 476,000 members in the state.
Wilcox said
the program, titled “Faith, Activity, and Nutrition (FAN),” also involves
scientists at Clemson University and the Medical University of South Carolina.
Wilcox is principal investigator; co-investigators include Marilyn Laken (MUSC),
Allen W. Parrott (AME church), Marge Condrasky (Clemson), Ruth Saunders (USC),
Cheryl Addy (USC), Marsha Dowda (USC), and Rebecca Evans (AME Church).
Wilcox
has worked on similar research involving the AME Church and the new program will
build on that relationship.
She describes FAN as a faith-based effort that gives
church leaders an opportunity to do some self-assessment of their churches and
“select things they can do to help members eat healthier and be more physically
active.”
The study also uses a community-based participatory research approach that
engaged church members in the design of the program from the start.
The study will initially involve 60 churches and 1,600 members. The project
began in the Kingstree and Georgetown areas with churches that belong to the
Palmetto Conference, the largest subdivision of the state church with
approximately 50,000 local members. The program is also in the Columbia area.
The effort is culturally and spiritually sensitive and aimed at helping
church leaders incorporate health living guidelines and practices into church
activities.
One example, Wilcox says, is that churches may decide that fresh fruits and
vegetables be on the menu at any church activity that features food.
Wilcox said the AME Church and other African-American denominations have
undertaken new responsibilities for the health of their members because of their
unique role in the black community.
The reasons for that include the wide health disparities in the
black community along with an increasing need for
guidance in helping people live
healthier.
The National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute,
an arm of the National
Institutes of Health,
is funding the research.
For more information on the program,
visit the program website at:
http://www.sph.sc.edu/exsc/wilcox/fan.htm.
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