Motivating people to get moving for health and wellness just got easier with Promoting Physical Activity, Second Edition. This guide for community action offers the tools and information you need to help people get off the couch and on their way to healthy living. If you want to encourage your community or group members to hop on their bike, take the stairs, or walk the neighborhood, Promoting Physical Activity, Second Edition, is for you.
Part I: Foundations for Physical Activity Promotion
Chapter 1: Health Benefits of Physical Activity
Chapter 2: Physical Activity Recommendations
Part II: Approaches and Interventions for Changing Physical Activity Behavior
Chapter 3: Informational Approaches to Promoting Physical Activity
Chapter 4: Behavioral and Social Approaches to Promoting Physical Activity
Chapter 5: Environmental and Policy Approaches to Promoting Physical Activity
Part III: Planning, Implementing, and Evaluating Your Intervention or Program
Chapter 6: Partnerships
Chapter 7: Program Planning and Evaluation
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is the nation’s premier public health agency, working to ensure healthy people in a healthy world.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), a part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, is the primary federal agency for conducting and supporting public health activities in the United States. CDC’s focus is not only on scientific excellence but also on the essential spirit that is CDC—to protect the health of all people. CDC keeps humanity at the forefront of its mission to ensure health protection through promotion, prevention, and preparedness.
CDC’s, Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity, and Obesity (DNPAO) is part of the CDC’s National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion. DNPAO’s vision, mission, and goals are:
DNPAO’s vision – a world where regular physical activity, good nutrition, and healthy weight are part of everyone's life.
DNPAO’s mission - to lead strategic public health efforts to prevent and control obesity, chronic disease, and other health conditions though regular physical activity and good nutrition.
DNPAO’s goals:
- Increase health-related physical activity through population-based approaches.
- Improve those aspects of dietary quality most related to the population burden of chronic disease and unhealthy child development.
- Decrease prevalence of obesity through preventing excess weight gain and maintenance of healthy weight loss.