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Brookline
celebrates National Public Health Week 2008
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The Brookline Department of Public Health will celebrate National
Public Health Week 2008 from April 5 through April 14, 2008, by
again offering to Brookline residents a week of public health talks,
interactive programs, and other events. Since 1995, when then
President Bill Clinton proclaimed the first full week of April as
National Public Health Week, Brookline has hosted activities to
highlight the role of public health in the town. Throughout
Massachusetts and the United States, communities will honor public
health professionals, applauding the role public health plays in
promoting health and quality of life for all Americans
Highlights of Brookline’s Public Health Week activities include:
Do You Need an Oil Change at Home? TRANSitioning Your Kitchen to
Better Health
On Monday, April 7, 2008, Brookline residents will learn how to
eliminate trans fats in the home and make heart-healthier choices at
a public forum at the Brookline Public Library. The forum, set to
begin at 6:30pm at the Brookline Public Library, 361 Washington
Street, will feature speakers, free food samples and giveaways
including modified recipes. Residents will learn how to read a
nutrition facts label properly, understand the nutritive differences
between good and bad fats, locate saturated fats in foods, and
convert recipes to remove trans fats. Kara Maloney MS, RD, LDN,
Clinical Dietitian, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Cindy
Crowninshield, Program Associate, Brookline Health
Department/Graduate Student, Nutrition Science, Boston University
are the speakers. Brigham and Women's Hospital, No Pudge!, and Town
of Brookline, Department of Public Health are the forum sponsors.
The forum coincides with the implementation of a new Brookline, MA
regulation which prohibits the use of trans fats at local food
establishments. Brookline is the first community in Massachusetts,
and one of only a handful in the United States, to pass such a law.
As Brookline restaurants and other food establishments go artificial
trans fat free, the Health Department’s goal is to educate and
encourage Brookline households to also eliminate these fats from
their personal diets. The forum is free and open to the public. Call
617-730-2300 for further information.
Are you a BIG-FOOT?
Come calculate your “environmental footprint” at the Brookline
Senior Center. How do what we eat, what we wear and how we get from
here to there affects the environment. Join us in a discussion on
what “global warming” and “climate change” mean and how certain
aspects of our lifestyles impact the earth. What are we doing right,
and what can we do better? Find out how our choices affect climate
change and what you can do to adjust your footprint size. Join in a
question and answer session to see how you measure up!
The full schedule of National Public Health Week events in Brookline
appears below.
Saturday, April 5
Rabies Clinic
Bring your dog or cat to be vaccinated. All pets must be brought on
a leash or in a cage by a person at least 14 years old. Fee: $10.
Brookline Health Department, 11 Pierce St. 9:00 AM-12:00 PM.
Monday, April 7
Printer Friendly Flyer
(PDF)
Do you need an oil change at home? TRANSitioning your kitchen to
better health
Learn how to cook healthier. Brookline Main Library, 361 Washington
St., Hunneman Hall, 6:30-8:00 PM.
Environmental Quiz
Visit the Health Department’s website to take the newest on-line
quiz:
www.townofbrooklinemass.com/health/
Tuesday, April 8
Brookline Women’s Walking Group
Come improve your fitness, increase physical activity and meet other
women in the community. Meet at the Brookline Reservoir at the pump
house or Griggs Park at the basketball hoop. Both locations meet at
8:30 AM or 5:30 PM.
Recognizing Strokes and Capturing Sneezes
Printer Friendly
Flyer (PDF)
Useful tools to prevent significant public health issues. Brookline
Main Library, 361 Washington St., Hunneman Hall, 12:00-1:00 PM.
Pandemic Flu Planning
Session hosted by the Brookline Public Health Nurse. Open to public
at O’Shea House, 61 Park St., 1:30 PM. Snacks and prizes. Event
repeats on Friday, April 11.
Wednesday, April 9
Working with Children in an Emergency
Medical Reserve Corps training session hosted by the Brookline
Public Health Nurse. Open to members of Brookline MRC. Please
contact the Brookline DPH for more information.
Thursday, April 10
English as a Second Language
Class taught by the Brookline Public Health Nurse. For registered
ESL students, 190 Harvard St. 6:30 PM. Please contact BDPH for more
information.
Friday, April 11
Printer Friendly Flyer (PDF)
Are you a BIG-FOOT?
Come calculate your “environmental footprint” at the Brookline
Senior Center. Join in a question and answer session to see how you
measure up. Forum hosted by Patrick Maloney and Samantha Baras,
staff at the Brookline Department of Public Health. Brookline Senior
Center, 93 Winchester St. 10:00-11:00 AM.
Pandemic Flu Planning
Session hosted by the Brookline Public Health Nurse. Open to public
at Sussman House, 50 Pleasant Street, 11:00 AM. Snacks and prizes.
Event repeats on Tuesday, April 8.
Monday, April 14
Symposium and Samples
Symposium on the new Trans Fat regulation, Brookline Food
Establishments are invited to attend a symposium about the new Trans
Fat regulation. Hosted by Newbury College, 3:00 PM.
SAVE THE DATE: Lynne Karsten, Director of Community Health,
announced that Brookline will host an additional public health event
in May. On Sunday, May 18, 2008, the Town will celebrate fitness
with a community bike ride along Beacon Street to be followed by a
Fitness Fair at Amory Park. The half- hour bike parade will be led
by the Brookline Bikes and the Brookline Police Department. The
Fitness Fair will include fitness demonstrations, Frisbee golf,
tennis and soccer clinics, yoga, and pilates ,plus give-always and
healthy food to sample.
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For Immediate Release: March 20, 2008
For further information: Lynne Karsten or Lauren Faehl, 617-730-2300 |
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