Wednesday, January 15, 2014

President Clinton Hosts Third Annual Health Matters Conference

Clinton Health Matters Initiative announces strategic investments in health and wellness totaling more than $100 million and impacting more than 50 million people across the United States

Today, the Clinton Foundation hosted the third annual Health Matters: Activating Wellness in Every Generation Conference. This conference brought together nearly 500 leaders from health care, technology, media, sports, education, business, and public policy to surface solutions and strategies on how to transform health in the United States. This year, the conference announced more than $100 million in new investments to make health and wellness accessible to all people in the United States with 30 strategic partners. More than 50 million people across the country will be impacted by these commitments to action.

 “One in six American lives will be touched by the investments we are making in health and wellness,” said President Clinton. “These 50 million people include kids with better access to healthier food options; college students informed about the dangers of prescription drug abuse and warning signs of suicide; and adults better equipped to manage their health and change their lifestyles to prevent disease.”

The conference, sponsored by Tenet Healthcare Corporation, included panels on issues such as health transformation, closing the gap in health inequities and disparities, and promoting healthy lifestyles. Participants included President Clinton, Chelsea Clinton, former U.S. Representative Patrick Kennedy, Jenna Wolfe, Sue Siegel, and Reverend Rick Warren.

Commitments to action established with the Foundation’s Clinton Health Matters Initiative (CHMI) strategic partners will be discussed throughout the day. Key news from CHMI strategic partners at this year’s conference included:
  • A new partnership with the Jed Foundation to make college campuses safer and support the mental and emotional health needs of students. This partnership is being supported by media partners such as Facebook, which is helping students identify the warning signs of suicide and provide tips for how to help a friend in need, and MTV, which is raising awareness of the dangers of prescription drug abuse.
     
  • A new partnership with the Aspen Institute Sport & Society Program to work with national governing bodies of sport, academia, and others to ensure that all children have access to physical activity and sports. This was discussed at the conference’s opening ESPN Town Hall, which included President Clinton and Kobe Bryant discussing key strategies to improve access to sports and physical activity; and commitments from Nike and the United States Olympic Committee to understand how to bring these positive experiences to all children.
     
  • A commitment from the Alliance for a Healthier Generation to expand its work to increase access to healthier foods and physical activity outside, as well as inside school environments.
     
  • An announcement of awards totaling $5 million by the Knight Foundation to winners of their challenge to use digital platforms to take health data and knowledge and bring it to individuals and communities in ways that they can use to improve their own health.
     
  • A partnership with the Palisades Media Ventures and the James Beard Foundation to launch the 800 Calorie Challenge, a national cooking competition that focuses on healthy eating and nutrition.
     
  • A joint commitment from the Saddleback ChurchP.E.A.C.E. Center, and the Daniel Plan to improve health and wellness in the Southern California region by increasing access to medical care, health good, and support groups for healthy living; the lessons from this commitment will be spread nationwide to every church in America.
For more information on the commitments to action made by the CHMI strategic partners and the 2014 Health Matters Conference, please visit: www.clintonfoundation.org.

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The Bill, Hillary & Chelsea Clinton Foundation convenes businesses, governments, NGOs, and individuals to improve global health and wellness, increase opportunity for women and girls, reduce childhood obesity, create economic opportunity and growth, and help communities address the effects of climate change.  Because of our work, 20,000 American schools are providing kids with healthy food choices in an effort to eradicate childhood obesity; 21,000 African farmers have improved their crops to feed 30,000 people; 248 million tons of greenhouse gas emissions are being reduced in cities worldwide; more than 5,000 people have been trained in marketable job skills in Colombia; more than 6.8 million people have benefited from lifesaving HIV/AIDS medications; $100 million in strategic investments have been made, impacting the health of 25 million people in the U.S.; and members of the Clinton Global Initiative have made nearly 2,500 Commitments to Action to improve more than 430 million lives around the world.

The Clinton Health Matters Initiative (CHMI) works to improve the health and wellbeing of people throughout the United States across all generations.  CHMI builds strategic partnerships to implement evidence-based systems, environmental and investment strategies, with the goals of ultimately reducing the prevalence of preventable diseases, reducing health care costs associated with preventable diseases, and reducing health disparity and inequity gaps. CHMI builds scalable solutions to address the drivers of health and wellness, serves as a catalyst for community health transformation by convening local partners and commitment-makers, and leverages the digital platform to innovate and disseminate best practices.

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