Title: National Center on Physical Activity and Disability
1National Center on Physical Activity and
Disability
- James H. Rimmer, Ph.D., Professor
- University of Illinois at Chicago
- Director, National Center on Physical
- Activity and Disability
- IFC Executive Committee Co-Chair
- September 13, 2007
2Presentation Outline
- Health Disparities in Adults and Youth with
Disabilities - NCPADs
- Central Mission
- Resources
- Future
3Health Disparities In Adults with Disabilities
4Without Disabilities
Health Disparities - Adults
With Disabilities
5Health Disparities - Adults
Risk Factor
Percent
6Health Disparities In Youth with Disabilities
7Disparity in physical activity participation
among youth with disabilities
- Youth with disabilities are 4.5 times more likely
to be physically inactive compared to
non-disabled youth. - Youth with disabilities are twice as likely as
non-disabled youth to report watching TV for more
than 4 hours per day. - 26.6 of youth with disabilities report 3 hours
/school day of sedentary activities vs. 20.4 of
youth without disabilities.
8Youth with Disabilities are Vulnerable to
Overweight and Obesity
- Researchers have reported a higher prevalence of
overweight among children and adolescents with - Spina bifida
- Prader-Willi syndrome
- Down syndrome
- Muscular dystrophy
- Brain Injury
- Visual impairments
- Learning Disabilities
- ADHD and autism spectrum disorders
- Rimmer et al. Obesity Levels Among Youth with
Disabilities, J Adoles Health, 2007.
9Prevalence of Overweight (BMI 95th) among
Youth (ages 617) by Disability and Sex.
Percentage
Source 1999-2002 National Health and Nutrition
Examination Survey reported by Bandini et al.
(2005).
10Overweight and Obese Youth are at Increased Risk
of Serious Health Issues
- Chronic Conditions
- High blood pressure
- Hyperlipidemia
- Insulin resistance
- Secondary Conditions
- Mobility limitations
- Extreme deconditioning
- Fatigue
- Pain
- Depression
- Social isolation
11Adolescents with and without disabilities who
exercise lt once per week
Percent Exercising 1 / week
Steele et al., 2004 Data from the Canadian WHO
Cross-National Survey of Health Behaviors in
School-Aged Children (HBSC).
(OR 4.50 95 CI 3.55-5.72)
12The Challenge Before Us
- Physical activity is significantly lower and
obesity significantly higher in youth and adults
with disabilities. - The problem is exacerbated by
- Children and adults with disabilities have less
access to physical activity. - Technology and convenience items reduce energy
expenditure in IADL and ADL. - Unemployment rate for working age people with
disabilities is more than three times that for
non-disabled people.
13Cycle of Physical Inactivity and Onset of
Secondary Conditions
Development of secondary conditions
Physical inactivity
Onset or increase of functional limitations
Decreased capacity to engage in physical activity
14NCPADs Three Central Features
- A resource and information center on physical
activity and disability, with thousands of
references on the subject. - A health promotion center encouraging and
supporting healthy lifestyles for people with
disabilities. - A research and training center promoting further
research on the benefits of physical activity and
guiding best practice in the field.
15What We Do
- Identify, collect, synthesize, and organize
materials on physical activity and disability. - Create useful resources for consumers,
professionals, and researchers. - Increase public awareness of the importance of
physical activity for people with disabilities.
16More of What We Do
- Promote increased participation in physical
activity by people with disabilities. - Educate consumers and professionals about best
practices and safe methods of exercise. - Identify important research issues and stimulate
further research on physical activity and
disability.
17Pathways to Inclusion in Disability and Health
Healthy, Active Lifestyles FOR ALL
Barriers to Physical Activity Make it More
Difficult for People with Disabilities to Reach
the Goal
Empower the Person
Enable the Environment
Improve Physiological and Psychological Health
Promote Adherence
Increase Participation
Provide Access
18How Do We Get There?
- Better surveillance systems to track and monitor
obesity and PA levels in Youth and Adults with
disabilities - Evidence-based practices in physical activity and
health promotion for youth and adults with
disabilities - Inclusive (livable) communities for youth and
adults with disabilities
19How Do We Get There?
- Health marketing campaigns aimed at increasing
awareness and knowledge of major health
disparities - Education and Training Programs that increase
knowledge and awareness - Capacity Building (i.e., training students in
public health, continuing education)
20NCPAD Today
21Website Enhancements
22Interactive Features
23Directories
- The following searchable directories are
available online at www.ncpad.org - NCPAD Programs Database http//www.ncpad.org/progr
ams - NCPAD Personal Trainers Database
http//www.ncpad.org/trainers - NCPAD Parks Database http//www.ncpad.org/parks
- NCPAD Suppliers Database http//www.ncpad.org/supp
liers
24Technical Assistance
The NCPAD Contact Us Form
NCPAD Consumer Request Service System Form
25Partnership with the Presidents Council on
Physical Fitness and Sports (PCPFS)
- The initial focus of the partnership is on the
development of a series of fact sheets. - Identified topics
- International Classification of Functioning,
Disability, and Health - Pedometers for people with disabilities
- Resources to assist in locating accessible
recreation programs and facilities - Including people with disabilities in media
messaging (via pictures, placards, training
toolkitsany special considerations for talking
or working with people who have disabilities)
262007 Featured Products
- A complete list of NCPAD-developed resources is
available at www.ncpad.org/shop.
27NCPADs Next Steps Connecting to State Public
Health Departments
28Supporting State Implementation Projects in
Physical Activity
MT
ND
OR
NY
MI
IA
IL
CA
VA
KS
NC
NCPAD provides information resources and
technical assistance to the 16 State
Implementation Projects in the area of physical
activity for people with disabilities
Validated evidence based practice and effective
health promotion strategies for increasing
physical activity are fed back to NCPAD
AR
SC
NCPAD actively promotes adoption of evidence
based physical activity programs for people with
disabilities to all States
FL
29Working at the Intersection of Disability and
Health
- Establish framework for collecting, aggregating
and synthesizing data from various State
Disability and Health modules. - Build a longitudinal database that qualifies
the health behaviors (i.e., physical activity,
nutrition) of people with disabilities. - Track benefits of each program longitudinally
(i.e., post-implementation).
30Future Directions
- Customize (tailor) materials and content for
specific target audiences. - Establish a National Health Marketing Campaign
targeted to specific audiences (e.g., public
health professionals, providers, consumers,
etc.). - Develop safe, effective and innovative ways for
online exergaming for people with disabilities.
31Future Directions
- Employ new and emerging technologies that
encourage/motivate people with disabilities to
live healthier, active lifestyles. - Online community of exercisers using sport, dance
and general exercise. - Become an interactive Evidence-Based Center that
connects ongoing DH projects with each funded
State and rest of nation.
32Technology and Innovation Resources
- Accessible programs
- Personal trainers
- Exercise buddies
- PEP
- PEP for youth
- Cooperative or competitive play
- Full programs on DVD
- Downloadable clips
- Demonstrations of sport and recreation activities
User Supported Communities
Video Library
Interactive Online
33Livable Communities/Universal Design
34HEZ Toolkit
- Toolkit to build Health Empowerment Zones (HEZ)
for People with Disabilities - Accessible sidewalks and paths
- Healthy food choices
- Accessible recreation and exercise facilities
- Transportation choices
- Improving social networks
35HEZ Toolkit
- Toolkit content
- Accessibility and Participation
- Community Accessibility Survey
- Facilities
- AIMFREE (fitness facilities, parks, trails)
- Grocery Store Assessment Instrument (physical
availability and freshness/quality) - Built Environment
- Health Empowerment Zone Environmental Assessment
Tool (pathways, curb cuts)
36HEZ Toolkit
- Toolkit content (cont).
- Health Behavior (exercise and nutrition)
- PADS
- B-PADS
- Fat Fiber Questionnaire
- Health Outcomes
- Secondary Conditions Instrument
37Training Professionals and Paraprofessionals
38ACSM Distance Learning Initiative
Bridging the Gap
World of Disability
World of Fitness
39Inclusive Fitness Trainer Certification Program
- Health professionals gain entry-level knowledge
specific to physical activity and disability
40Capacity Building
41IFC Call to Action
- Work with the U.S. Surgeon General and the Office
on Disability - Create partnerships to expand accessibility
- Work with health care providers and organizations
to increase physical activity for people with
disabilities - Advocate for research and technologies
- Recognize those who support the cause
42 43Technology Innovation (PEPONLINE)
- Tailor to personal needs and environmental
factors. - Eliminate any and all barriers.
- Make it easy to implement.
- Keep it fluid - changing as the person changes.
- Provide some type of feedback mechanism on a
regular basis (i.e., monthly). - Account for seasonal changes (i.e. winter vs.
summer).
44PEPonline Coach Summary Screen
45PEPonline Participant Screen
46Personalized Attention
- Friendly, highly trained people available by a
toll-free telephone, TTY, e-mail, or fax to
provide personalized responses to yourquestions. - Toll-free phone 1-800-900-8086 (v or tty)
- E-mail to ncpad_at_uic.edu
- Fax questions to 1-312-355-4058