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2017 Annual Report GOVERNOR’S FOUNDATIONFOR HEALTH AND WELLNESS
Making the volunteer state healthier, one community at a time.
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278%&9:8;<9;,=%.9><?@AB9<%C9;%48@DA7%@<?%68DD<8==%B=%a non-profit, 501(c)(3) corporation, formed in 2013 and dedicated to enabling and encouraging Tennesseans to lead healthier lives. It brings together a statewide coalition of stakeholders from community organizations, business and industry, school systems, state and local government, faith communities, citizen leaders and volunteers to effect positive, measurable change. The Foundation is funded by a combination of public and private-sector sources and is guided by an independent board of directors. A team of 11 professionals, most based in the communities they serve, works to achieve the goals of the organization and implement Healthier Tennessee programs.
About the Foundation
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Letter from the CEO% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% %5
Measures of Performance% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% 6
Healthier Tennessee Communities% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% 7
Wellness Caucus% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E%%9
The Year Ahead E %E %E %E %E %E %E %E %E %E %E %E %E %E %E %E %E %E %E %E10
Board of Directors % E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E%11
Advisory Council% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E%11
Funding Partners% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E% E12
Table of Contents
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Dear Fellow Tennesseans:
For more than four years, we have been creating a movement to get people moving. We’ve been encouraging and enabling them to eat better, stay away from tobacco, and to join together to make Tennessee healthier. This grassroots effort has grown to include friends, families, and neighbors in more than 100 communities across this great state. It has provided simple and free tools and programs to help people take small steps that lead to big change–incremental improvements in how they feel, how resistive they are to diseases, how productive they are, and how long they live.
Members of the movement have accessed Healthier Tennessee resources at work, at worship, at school, and at home, so that today more than 2,000 workplaces with more than 150,000 employees have connected to our toolkits, about 500 places of worship have discovered ways to make the physical wellbeing of members part of their spiritual journey, and every elementary school in Tennessee has at least one classroom with students getting more physical activity during the school day at no cost to the school. Nearly 100,000 people have tapped into our app or found help on our website, and tens of thousands of Tennesseans are changing the culture of health here, one community at a time.
This annual report provides information about the Foundation, how we measure performance and progress, and how we are doing compared to other states. It looks at the work of everyday citizens doing remarkable things in cities, towns, rural counties, and on college campuses. It also tells you about an important new caucus formed by state legislators to focus on the health and wellbeing of those they serve, and it lists those who lead, direct, and advise the work we do to make this a Healthier Tennessee. Thank you for reading it and for your continued support and engagement. Your partnership and the success we measure in communities in all 95 counties of the state keep me convinced that we can achieve our vital and challenging mission. I believe we can do this, with each other, one step at a time.
Sincerely,
RICHARD JOHNSONPresident and Chief Executive Officer
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The Foundation tracks its progress and changes in near- and longer-term health indicators across the state. We consistently assess the number of Tennesseans who connect with our tools and programs %in workplaces, schools, places of worship, and local communities. %And we monitor surveys of health-related behavior conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and other organizations that compare the wellbeing of the people here at home with people across the nation.
How Are We Doing?Tennessee’s place in America’s Health Rankings, a compilation %of statistics from Centers for Disease Control surveys.
Rate of Obesity: 34.8% | State Ranking 45/51
Physical Inactivity: 28.4% | State Ranking 40/51
Smoking: 22.1% | State Ranking 43/51
Number of People Connecting with Healthier Tennessee Tools and Programs
SMALL STARTS @<? STREAKS !"# SMALL STARTS
SMALL STARTS !"# WORK
SMALL STARTS !"# WORSHIP
SMALL STARTS !"# FAMILIES
Measures of Performance
84,077
2,181
583
603
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In March 2015, groups of citizen volunteers from nine pilot communities–rural counties, towns, and suburban neighborhoods–stood on a stage in a room in the Capitol with Governor Bill Haslam and pledged to work to get the places they live officially designated as Healthier Tennessee Communities. Today, there are more than 100 places across the state that are working for that designation, and nearly half of them have achieved it.
Healthier Tennessee Communities is a primary initiative of the Foundation, and it had tremendous growth and positive impact in 2017. It has expanded to include a health-and-wellness community council in nearly every one of the 95 counties in the state, and Communities now include metro neighborhoods and college and university campuses.%%
Each community council sets measurable goals for increasing physical activity, improving nutrition, and lowering tobacco use in its area and develops a plan and a way to track and report progress. Members then get to work, engaging volunteers across the community, staging events, improving the built environment, teaching and engaging, and changing the culture of health in their hometown or neighborhood oron their campus. Their accomplishments are recognized in ceremonies with theGovernor and Foundation leaders, and they’re presented an official flag, commemorative plaque, road signs, and more–all to tell Tennessee, and the world, that their communities are now healthier, better places to work, worship, learn, and live.
Healthier Tennessee Communities
WESTArlingtonBenton County*Carroll CountyChester CountyColliervilleCrockett County*Decatur County*Dyer County*Germantown*Gibson County*Fayette CountyHardeman County*Hardin CountyHaywood County*Henderson County*Henry CountyLake County*Lauderdale County*Madison County*McNairy County*Obion County*Tipton County*Weakley County*
WESTERN MIDDLE Cheatham CountyClarksville*Dickson County*.;@<FDB<*%Giles County*%Hickman County*Houston County*Humphreys CountyLawrence CountyMaury County*Robertson CountySpring Hill*Stewart CountySumner CountyTrousdale County*Wayne County
SOUTHEAST%Bledsoe County*Blount CountyBradley County*Collegedale*Franklin CountyGrundy County*Loudon County*Marion CountyMcMinn County*Meigs CountyMonroe CountyPolk CountyRhea County*Sequatchie CountyVan Buren CountyWarren County%White County
EASTERN MIDDLE Bedford County*Cannon CountyClay CountyCookeville*Crossville /%Cumberland County*DeKalb County*Fentress CountyJackson County*%Lincoln CountyMacon County*%ManchesterMarshall County*Moore CountyPickett CountyRutherford CountySmith CountyTullahoma*Wilson County*
NORTHEAST%Anderson County*Campbell CountyCarter CountyClaiborne CountyCocke CountyGrainger CountyGreene CountyHamblen County*Hancock CountyHawkins CountyJefferson CountyJohnson CountyKingsport*Morgan CountyRoane County*Scott CountySevier County*Washington CountyUnicoi County*Union County
* designated communities
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The Tennessee Legislative Wellness Caucus was created by members of the Tennessee %General Assembly in 2017 to focus on health and wellness issues. It is a bipartisan group %of elected leaders who understand the tremendous importance of making this state healthier, led by co-chairmen Senator Bo Watson and Representative Ryan Williams. With 37 charter members, the Caucus will concentrate on the causes of our state’s extremely high rates of chronic, behavior-related diseases like Type 2 diabetes, hypertension, and cardiovascular disease. Members will also address the severe economic impact that these adverse health conditions have on Tennessee, with a recent study reporting the cost to be in excess of $5 billion every year. The Foundation will provide staff support and other assistance to the Caucus and collaborate on proposed policy changes and wellness-related legislation.
Bipartisan Support
Senator Paul Bailey District 15Senator Mike Bell District 9Senator Richard Briggs District 7Representative Sheila Butt District 64Representative David Byrd District 71Representative John Ray Clemmons District 55Senator Rusty Crowe District 3Representative Michael Curcio District 69Senator Steve Dickerson District 20Representative John Fogerty District 23Representative Ron Gant District 94Representative Brenda Gilmore District 54Senator Mark Green District 22Senator Ferrell Haile District 18Senator Lee Harris District 29Senator Joey Hensley District 28Representative Gary Hicks District 9Senator Ed Jackson District 27Representative Darren Jernigan District 60
Senator Brian Kelsey District 31Representative Sabi Kumar District 66Representative Harold Love District 58Representative Susan Lynn District 57Senator Becky Duncan Massey District 6Representative Gerald McCormick District 26Representative Cameron Sexton District 25Representative Johnny Shaw District 80Representative Rick Staples District 15Senator John Stevens District 24Senator Reginald Tate District 33Representative Bryan Terry District 48Representative Dwayne Thompson District 96Representative Ron Travis District 31Senator Bo Watson* District 11Representative Mark White District 83Representative Ryan Williams* District 42Representative Jason Zachary District 14
* denotes chairperson
Caucus Members
The coming year will be more of the same but include some new steps, too. We will continue to help our local partners cultivate healthier communities across Tennessee. Getting more and more people involved in local programs and action steps that get us all moving more, eating healthier, and staying away from tobacco are our number-one priorities. And we will also continue our efforts to improve the health of young children and families, with tools and programs delivered at the community and neighborhood level.
But we are also planning a course that will take us on a new path, one%that increases our role as advocates for public policies that encourage and enable better health, regulations and policies in workplaces that make them healthier, and programs that allow students to be more active during the school day. And we will do our best to make sure more people understand that health issues are economic issues, too.
We remain grateful that you are walking with us.
The Year Ahead
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Agenia Clark, CEO, Girl Scouts of Middle Tennessee
Reginald Coopwood, M.D., CEO, Regional One Health
Richard Johnson, CEO, The Governor’s Foundation for Health and Wellness
Bryan Jordan, President and CEO, First Horizon National Corporation
Larry Martin, Commissioner, Tennessee Department of Finance and Administration
C. Wright Pinson, M.D., MBA, Deputy Vice Chancellor for Health Affairs and CEO, Vanderbilt Health System
Heather Rohan, President, TriStar Division, Hospital Corporation of America
Perry Stuckey, Senior Vice President, Eastman Chemical Company
Crystal Washington, Senior Vice President, Scripps Networks Interactive
Jamie Woodson, CEO, State Collaborative on Reforming Education (S.C.O.R.E.)
Elyse Adler, Assistant Director for Community Engagement, Nashville Public Library
Kevin Anton, Retired Vice President and Chief Sustainability Officer, ALCOA
Shari Barkin, M.D. Professor of Pediatrics, Vanderbilt Children’s Hospital
Scott Bowers, Regional President, Evolent Health
Rebecca Carter, Associate Director, Community Impact, United Way of Middle TN
Josh Davis, Senior Benefits Manager, Eastman Chemical Company
Jim Dickson, President, YMCA of East Tennessee
Kimberly Eck, PhD, Director, Research Development Team, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Ben Elrod, Vice President, Human Resources, CoreCivic
Jason Guess, Director of Safety, Health and Ergonomics, Volkswagen Group of America
Joan Han, M.D., Director, Pediatric Obesity Program, Le Bonheur Children’s Hospital
Bob Higgins, President and CEO, Barge, Waggoner, Sumner, and Cannon, Inc.
Gene Hoover, Market Pharmacy Director, Tennessee Market, Walgreens Co.
Patricia Kirkpatrick, Vice President, Quality Management, Amerigroup Corporation
Randy Kostiuk, Manager, Wellness Education and Nutrition, Church Health
Jack Lacey, M.D., Former Chief Medical Officer, UT Medical Center
Jim Lancaster, M.D., Senior Medical Director, Cigna
Marian Levy, Interim Associate Dean, School of Public Health, University of Memphis
Beth Malow, M.D., Professor of Neurology and Pediatrics, Vanderbilt University
Michele Molden, Senior Vice President, The Advisory Board Company
Ed Pershing, Co-Founder and President, Pershing Yoakley & Associates
Kenneth Robinson, M.D., President and CEO, United Way of the Mid-South
Carol Ross Spang, Chief Human Resources Officer, Methodist Le Bonheur Healthcare
Tyler Sanderson, Director, Total Rewards, BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee
Vicki Shepard, Vice President, Government and External Relations, Tivity Health
Kyle Spurgeon, President and CEO, Jackson Chamber of Commerce
Cristie Travis, CEO, Memphis Business Group on Health
Jude White, Director, Governor’s Children’s Cabinet, State of Tennessee
Randy Wykoff, M.D., Dean and Professor, East Tennessee State University School of Public Health
Dave Yarmuth, Director of Benefits, Bridgestone Americas
Caroline Young, Executive Director, NashvilleHealth
Board of Directors
Advisory Council
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Funding Partners
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