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Category: Community News Community News
Published: 11 July 2016 11 July 2016

Grant County, NM (July 10, 2016)' Between 2010 and 2015, New Mexico has tracked significant declines in the overweight and obesity rates among students in kindergarten and third grade. Throughout this timeframe, Healthy Kids Healthy Communities (HKHC)* has been a key program for helping children eat well and move more. Starting with one pilot site in Las Cruces, the initiative now reaches 15 counties and five tribal communities, serving nearly one in four of New Mexico's public elementary school students in communities with the highest poverty rates.

HKHC builds state and local partnerships to make it easier for kids and low-income families to eat healthy and be active, anywhere they live, learn, work, or play. The program focuses on making policy and environmental changes in four areas:

Healthy Kids New Mexico also runs a 5-2-1-O Challenge, encouraging children to eat five or more fruits and vegetables each day, have no more than two hours of screen time per day, be active for at least one hour, and drink lots of water (H2O) each day.

By taking a comprehensive approach to childhood obesity prevention, the state and its partners are creating healthier schools and communities for all children.

You can reach Healthy Kids Healthy Communities Grant County at: 575-313-3371, alicia@hkhcgrantcounty.org or www.hkhcgrantcounty.org

This story originally appeared on the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation website http://www.rwjf.org/en/library/articles-and-news/2013/07/new-mexico--signs-of-progress.html