Resources
Social Marketing/Awareness Campaigns
- Just Move It
- Just Move It
is a national campaign to promote physical activity for American Indians and Alaska Natives. Use the website below to learn how to start an activity in your own community, share information about ongoing programs, contribute stories, find resources, and enter information in Just Move It’s calendar.
- Let’s Move!
- The Let’s Move!
campaign has an ambitious, but important, goal: to solve the epidemic of childhood obesity within a generation. Join First Lady Michelle Obama, community leaders, teachers, doctors, nurses, moms, and dads in a nationwide campaign to tackle the challenge of childhood obesity.
- Let’s Move! in Indian Country
- Let’s Move! in Indian Country
is an interagency initiative dedicated to solving the problem of obesity within a generation, so that Native American children born today will grow up healthier and be able to pursue their dreams. Sam Bradford speaks about Let’s Move! in Indian Country:
Transcript [Text – 2 KB]
- Social Marketing for Nutrition and Physical Activity
- The CDC’s Social Marketing for Nutrition and Physical Activity
online course teaches public health professionals how to use social marketing to plan nutrition, physical activity, and obesity prevention programs.
- Obesity Prevention Coordinators’ Social Marketing Guidebook.
- Developed by the Florida Prevention Research Center at the University of South Florida, this marketing guidebook
[PDF – 2.6 MB] provides instruction on how to coordinate a social marketing intervention for nutrition, physical activity, or obesity prevention. It includes worksheets, tools, and information to help in the management and coordination of a social marketing program. The guidebook supplements the CDCynergy Social Marketing Edition, an interactive training and decision-support tool, and adds practical tips and information specific to nutrition, physical activity, and obesity.
- We Have the Power to Prevent Diabetes.
- Tailored to American Indians and Alaska Natives at risk for type 2 diabetes, these copyright-free public service announcements
, print advertisements
[PDF – 848 KB], and tip sheets
[PDF – 740 KB] promote moving more and eating less to lower their risk for diabetes.
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