5210 - High Fives for Family Meals!

By Arissa Geiser, Viterbo College Nutrition Student

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This Month's Spotlight:

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High Fives for Family Meals

Families that eat together three or more times a week tend to have a healthier weight, engage in overall healthy eating patterns, and perform better in school.*
Five Meal-Time Tips:

  1. Prioritize it! Work around schedules. Mark the calendar when family meals are happening. Include time for cooking, eating, and cleaning!

  2. Plan it! Get input from family members and plan a menu for the week. Put it in on a chalkboard in the kitchen so they can look forward to that meal! Designate a “Chef” for each meal.

  3. Produce it!  Turn off the electronics and focus on each other. Talk about each other’s days and things to look forward to!

  4. Make it! Harvest of the Month Recipes from Jackson In Action

  5. Live it!  More about family meals here

*Hammons AJ, Fiese BH. Is Frequency of Shared Family Meals Related to the Nutritional Health of Children and Adolescents Pediatrics. 2011;127(6):e1565-e1574. doi:10.1542/peds.2010-1440.

Try a family favorite recipe from Harvest of the Month! Sahara Sweet Potato Soup

Photo Credit:simplehealthykitchen.com

Photo Credit:simplehealthykitchen.com


HUNTER FITNESS STARTS AUGUST 26

HUNTER FITNESS

Jackson In Action is excited to again be sponsoring a Hunter Fitness class for Jackson County residents in 2017, led by Kathleen Clemons. Classes are held on Saturday mornings at 9 am or Tuesday evenings at 5:15 pm, and will take place from Aug. 26  - Oct. 28th. Classes are free of charge, though County Park and State Park fees may apply for designated sessions. All participants must be registered ahead of time and have medical paperwork on file.

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For more information contact Kathleen Clemons. Registration forms are on the link above. 

 

Jackson County 5-2-1-0 Two Week Challenge Concludes

Congratulations are extended to hundreds of local residents who participated in the Jackson County 5210 Challenge! Great work!

"FRUITY RUTY" sings the 5-2-1-0 Song with Laces to Leaders Participants 

"FRUITY RUTY" sings the 5-2-1-0 Song with Laces to Leaders Participants 

Click the image above to check out the song on Facebook

FINAL STEPS...TURNING IN YOUR TRACKER!

Turn in your completed tracker by Sunday, July 2, to be entered in a prize drawing. Two ways to turn in your completed tracker:

  • Snap a cell phone picture of your completed tracker and email to jacksoninaction12@gmail.com; OR
  • Drop off at one of the following dropbox locations: BRMH Cafeteria, Boys & Girls Club - Lunda Center, UW-Extension Office, Jackson County Farmer's Market booth, or ACHM High School Office

You do not need to turn in a perfect tracker to win; all participants turn in a tracker (regardless of the number of boxes checked) will be entered in the prize drawing. Multiple prizes will be given away so do not forget to turn in your tracker!

What can I win???

  • $100 Chamber Bucks
  • $25 Scheels gift card
  • $25 Kwik Trip gift card
  • Outdoor games / activity baskets
  • Lunda Community Center day passes
  • And more...

Please take our 5210 Post-Challenge Survey! Click here!

Laces to Leaders Group Launches 5-2-1-0 Video at Boys & Girls Club - Black River Falls, Wisconsin

Join the Laces to Leaders girls as they sing the new 5-2-1-0 song to the tune of the YMCA Song by the Village People

5210 song written by Ruth Lahmayer Chipps, MS, RDN, CD, JacksonInAction Leader & Registered Dietitian/BRMH

             Sing it for yourself with this music background(Instrumentals here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HYly8Ignaw0)  and the words below: 

Jackson in Action shares best practices for community health improvement

UPDATE: 11/28/17  Read the full report on the event from Robert Wood Johnson's Consulting Firm 

Black River Falls, WI - A national foundation recently requested four national meetings in rural areas to answer the question, “How do rural communities work on rural health needs, and how can we best engage with them?”  Wisconsin was asked to serve as one of these four meeting sites.

John Eich, director of the Wisconsin Office of Rural Health said, “We asked Jackson in Action (JIA), a coalition working to improve the health of Jackson County residents, to start off the conversation as a panel. The audience, made up of agencies and organizations from Wisconsin and Minnesota, took part in large-group conversations after the initial presentations by JIA. The conclusions and ideas from this meeting will be carried back by national researchers for their report to a major national foundation (Robert Wood Johnson Foundation).

Photo: Amy Yaeger 

Photo: Amy Yaeger 

Jackson in Action is chaired by Nicole Schweitzer, rehabilitation services director at Black River Memorial Hospital. Schweitzer and JIA members discussed the county health rankings, which Jackson County first appeared at 71 out of 72 counties in 2010 and the initiatives they have implemented which have helped improve the ranking to 32nd in 2017. Schweitzer shared the many efforts by Jackson in Action to improve the health of Jackson County residents, like the Pace and Pedal Duathlon and Jackson County Fitness Day, Laces to Leaders, Nutrition Education with local youth and more.

Chris Hovell, Director of the Department of Health and Human Services, spoke about the initiatives at the county level that tie to the efforts Jackson in Action is making in the community.

Video: Nicole Schweitzer, Chair of Jackson In Action and John Eich, WI Office of Rural Health discussed the May 31, 2017  event that highlighted JIA's accomplishments in a Healthy Living forum. 

An audience made up of agencies and organizations from Wisconsin and Minnesota, took part in large-group conversations about health improvement efforts which will be carried back by national researchers for their report to a major national foundation (Robert Wood Johnson Foundation).