St. Mary’s School for the Deaf Receives Grant for Whole-Body Wellness

American Heart Association awards funding for physical activity equipment.

BUFFALO, Tuesday, January 24, 2023 — Reducing sedentary behavior and increasing physical activity is key to immediate and long-term health for children. That is why the American Heart Association, devoted to world of healthier lives for all, the National Football League (NFL) and the Buffalo Bills have awarded a $1,000 grant to St. Mary’s School for the Deaf in Buffalo. The grant is to be used for physical activity equipment to support students at St. Mary’s School for the Deaf achieving their daily 60-minutes of physical activity.

“The students and staff at St. Mary’s School for the Deaf are honored to be selected to win this grant from the NFL and the American Heart Association,” Jim Carmody, athletic director and physical education teacher at St. Mary’s School for the Deaf said. “Being from Buffalo, we are all loyal fans and as a community love our Buffalo Bills. We also understand the importance of physical activity and the benefits of exercise and daily activity. Just like Coach Sean McDermott, we trust the process!”

One grant is awarded on behalf of each of the 32 NFL clubs. The national recipient of an additional $1,000 will be announced in the NFL PLAY 60 Super Bowl Fitness Break which will take place on Feb. 9. It will be followed by an NFL PLAY 60 Draft Fitness Break on April 26. Advanced registration for both broadcasts is required.

Rooted in science, NFL PLAY 60 helps children to develop healthy habits for a better chance of a healthy adulthood. The program encourages kids to get a minimum of 60 minutes of vigorous physical activity each day to meet the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ 2018 Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans.

NFL PLAY 60 offers students, teachers and parents a suite of free activities to help reach the recommended 60-minutes of daily physical activity. NFL PLAY 60 resources can be found online at heart.org/NFLPLAY60.

  • NFL PLAY 60 App: The free NFL PLAY 60 app helps kids get more movement throughout the day by using their activity to control personalized avatars onscreen in a fun interactive environment. Kids can add players to the roster to play catch, train, and prepare for competition. App content is available for individual play or in classroom format. The app is available for iOS and Android devices. New this year is Group Play functionality which allows classrooms to get active together!
  • NFL PLAY 60 Exercise Library: In collaboration with the 32 NFL clubs, the NFL PLAY 60 library features kid-friendly exercises to help kids to get their recommended 60-minutes of daily physical activity. The library features 1–3-minute videos of players, mascots and cheerleaders moving more from homes, stadiums and practice fields.
  • American Heart Association NFL PLAY 60 Playlist: A robust playlist of all things AHA and NFL PLAY 60. This playlist offers past Super Bowl Virtual Field Trips, club exercise videos, combine drills, Kids Day Broadcasts, NFL PLAY 60 chapter videos and more! This Playlist can inspire hours of activity for your child or students.The NFL and the American Heart Association have teamed up since 2006 to inspire kids through fun and engaging ways to get physically active. The impact of physical activity on overall mental and physical wellness are essential to help children grow to reach their full potential. Information on the grant process and additional NFL PLAY 60 resources can be found online at heart.org/NFLPLAY60.

     

Department of Health and Human Services, Physical Activity Guidelines, page 14. Available for download here:https://health.gov/paguidelines/default.aspx

The post St. Mary’s School for the Deaf Receives Grant for Whole-Body Wellness appeared first on Buffalo Healthy Living Magazine.

Related articles

‘They’re Killing Civilians’: Ukrainians Describe Carnage of Russian War Crimes on ’60 Minutes’

Ukrainians told 60 Minutes about the "unimaginable" war crimes they have endured over the last 3 years, including kidnapped children and savage random bombings

The post ‘They’re Killing Civilians’: Ukrainians Describe Carnage of Russian War Crimes on ’60 Minutes’ first appeared on Mediaite.

‘Breaking his pledge’: Wall Street Journal slams RFK Jr.’s ‘ideological crusade’ at CDC



The Wall Street Journal's conservative editorial board slammed President Donald Trump's Health Secretary over his "ideological crusade" to turn the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention into an anti-vaccine agency.

Last week, the CDC revised its Vaccine Safety page to include a new advisory for claims that "vaccines do not cause autism." The website now says the claim "is not an evidence-based claim because studies have not ruled out the possibility that infant vaccines cause autism. Studies supporting a link have been ignored by health authorities.”

The new guidance cites a discredited study authored by a scientist at the University of Colorado, Boulder, who wrote a newsletter for Children's Health Defense, an anti-vaccine group that Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. led, WSJ's editors wrote in a new editorial.

Kennedy has repeatedly asserted that there are ties between vaccines and childhood rates of autism, although experts have questioned the evidence he's provided to support such claims.

The editors noted that the revised guidelines seem like a lawyerly attempt by Kennedy to keep his promise to GOP Senators like Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-LA) not to change the CDC's vaccine advisory.

"He is also breaking his pledge to Mr. Cassidy not to push vaccines for children off the market," the editorial notes. "Early next month, Mr. Kennedy’s handpicked Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices will discuss aluminum adjuvants and could require manufacturers to remove them from vaccines. That could force a dozen vaccines out of use."

"The aluminum ingredient in vaccines isn’t the same as what’s in kitchen foil," the editorial adds. "Aluminum is naturally present in plants, soil, water, and many foods, including vegetables, tea, and chocolate. During the first six months of life, infants ingest significantly more aluminum from breast milk or formula than they get from vaccines. But RFK Jr. is on an ideological crusade. Reformulating these vaccines with different adjuvants would cost billions of dollars and could take years."

Read the entire editorial by clicking here.