This deck details the Million Mile Month program, a challenge to get people physically active. The deck details what MMM is, how it works, how it came to be and where we see it going.
Consumers at the Center: Designing for a health revolutionGreg Matthews
An overview of Humana's consumer-centered philosophy on designing for health (vs. managing sickness). Created and presented by Paul Puopolo, Tony Tomazic and Greg Matthews in November 2009
- Walking provides significant health benefits and can help treat and prevent many common health issues like diabetes, depression, cancer, and heart disease. It is recommended that adults get 30 minutes per day of walking or other physical activity.
- A national Walking Summit was held with over 400 participants to discuss how to promote walking and make communities more walkable. Ideas discussed included celebrating a National Walking Month, encouraging health professionals to prescribe walking, and providing incentives for those who walk regularly. The summit highlighted the health, social, economic, and environmental benefits of prioritizing walkability.
Matt Pegouskie of the Chelsea-Area Wellness Foundation was recognized by the Michigan Recreation and Park Association with a 2015 Community Service Award for his work connecting organizations and developing projects that encourage physical activity. As Community Investment Manager, Pegouskie has secured over $1 million in grants for initiatives like parks and trails. He plans to continue supporting infrastructure that allows communities to take advantage of recreation resources.
The American Cancer Society is holding its India Run for Hope to raise awareness and funds to fight cancer in India, where over 2.5 million new cases are diagnosed each year, and 500,000 people die from the disease annually. The ACS has already trained 70 leaders and established 30 cancer camps in India through its India Cancer Initiative. The annual 5K runs aim to raise $100,000 to expand these efforts nationwide and continue training leaders and establishing camps to combat cancer in India.
Andy Younger and Joe DiMambro review how The Crim has worked with the community of Flint for 40 years to create one of the most successful races in the country.
This PowerPoint presentation assists the discussion from the second City Exchange Project session. This sessions focuses on Race, Food Justice, and Policy Implications/Implementation. CRFS Project participants from 6 US cities participated in this discussion.
The document outlines strategies and initiatives across multiple levels to promote population health in Malaysia. It discusses upstream, midstream, and downstream approaches, including developing personal skills, reorienting health services, strengthening community actions through coalitions and programs, creating supportive environments through workplace and food store interventions, and building healthy public policy regarding food, physical activity, and obesity. Specific initiatives mentioned include the Exercise is Medicine program, food policy councils, nature trail networks, mobile health clinics, wellness reward programs, and infrastructure improvements to support walking and cycling.
Consumers at the Center: Designing for a health revolutionGreg Matthews
An overview of Humana's consumer-centered philosophy on designing for health (vs. managing sickness). Created and presented by Paul Puopolo, Tony Tomazic and Greg Matthews in November 2009
- Walking provides significant health benefits and can help treat and prevent many common health issues like diabetes, depression, cancer, and heart disease. It is recommended that adults get 30 minutes per day of walking or other physical activity.
- A national Walking Summit was held with over 400 participants to discuss how to promote walking and make communities more walkable. Ideas discussed included celebrating a National Walking Month, encouraging health professionals to prescribe walking, and providing incentives for those who walk regularly. The summit highlighted the health, social, economic, and environmental benefits of prioritizing walkability.
Matt Pegouskie of the Chelsea-Area Wellness Foundation was recognized by the Michigan Recreation and Park Association with a 2015 Community Service Award for his work connecting organizations and developing projects that encourage physical activity. As Community Investment Manager, Pegouskie has secured over $1 million in grants for initiatives like parks and trails. He plans to continue supporting infrastructure that allows communities to take advantage of recreation resources.
The American Cancer Society is holding its India Run for Hope to raise awareness and funds to fight cancer in India, where over 2.5 million new cases are diagnosed each year, and 500,000 people die from the disease annually. The ACS has already trained 70 leaders and established 30 cancer camps in India through its India Cancer Initiative. The annual 5K runs aim to raise $100,000 to expand these efforts nationwide and continue training leaders and establishing camps to combat cancer in India.
Andy Younger and Joe DiMambro review how The Crim has worked with the community of Flint for 40 years to create one of the most successful races in the country.
This PowerPoint presentation assists the discussion from the second City Exchange Project session. This sessions focuses on Race, Food Justice, and Policy Implications/Implementation. CRFS Project participants from 6 US cities participated in this discussion.
The document outlines strategies and initiatives across multiple levels to promote population health in Malaysia. It discusses upstream, midstream, and downstream approaches, including developing personal skills, reorienting health services, strengthening community actions through coalitions and programs, creating supportive environments through workplace and food store interventions, and building healthy public policy regarding food, physical activity, and obesity. Specific initiatives mentioned include the Exercise is Medicine program, food policy councils, nature trail networks, mobile health clinics, wellness reward programs, and infrastructure improvements to support walking and cycling.
Power Smart Business Operations with Real-Time Process Intelligence - Solutio...Beyond Technologies
The sooner you detect and act upon threats and opportunities, the sooner you can move your business forward. With complete visibility into end-to-end
business processes and an understanding of where to focus, your frontline employees are empowered to make better and faster decisions during daily business operations in real time.
Science Buddies Staff. (2014, April 21). Follow the Bouncing Ball: A Web Animation Project. Retrieved July 25, 2014 from http://www.sciencebuddies.org/science-fair-projects/project_ideas/CompSci_p012.shtml
This document summarizes email statistics from 2012 to 2016. It found that total worldwide daily emails increased from 144.8 billion to 192.2 billion over this period, with business emails growing from 89 billion to 143.8 billion per day (a 13% annual increase) and consumer emails declining slightly from 55.8 billion to 48.4 billion per day (a 3% annual decrease).
This document discusses patient confidentiality training requirements under HIPAA. It provides an overview of what HIPAA is, what protected health information it covers, and penalties for violations. It states that all employees with access to patient information must be trained. Training is required at employee orientation and annually, and can be done in-person. The training covers how employers use protected health information, precautions taken to ensure confidentiality, and privacy policies and procedures.
Save planet earth [autosaved] by lawrence aaron roque youngbloodAaron Aaron
The document discusses various ways that humans can help save the Earth from environmental problems. It suggests planting more trees to increase oxygen and stop cutting down rainforests. It also recommends switching to hybrid vehicles and renewable energy to reduce fossil fuel usage. Recycling is presented as an easy way for everyone to help by following the three R's: reduce, reuse, recycle. The document emphasizes that the world is precious and must be protected for future generations.
The New MOTOTRBO SL300 is an ultra-light and thin two-way radio that weighs half a can of soup, is less than an inch thick, and will fit into a purse, making it perfect for teachers, administrators, managers, supervisors and others. RCS is offering a free demo and 20% off the MSRP of the SL300 UHF two-way radio, with prices starting at $583.
The document is a curriculum vitae for Rahul Duryodhan Atpadkar. It summarizes his educational qualifications including a M.Sc. in Industrial Chemistry, technical skills like spectroscopy and chromatography, work experience in quality control and testing at a pharmaceutical company, and lists referees.
Este documento presenta un proyecto diseñado por Annell Pulido Dominguez para introducir a niños preescolares a la tecnología de una manera educativa. El proyecto involucra actividades en línea guiadas por la maestra y realizadas con la ayuda de los padres para familiarizar a los niños con herramientas tecnológicas y mostrarles sus beneficios educativos. El proyecto se evaluará a través de anécdotas sobre las actividades realizadas y abarcará los seis campos formativos de manera lúdic
This document outlines the standard operating procedures for the Section of Ophthalmic Pathology at the DOH Eye Center. It includes learning objectives in cognitive, psychomotor, and affective domains. For the cognitive objectives, teaching-learning activities include large and small group discussions, independent study, and written/oral exams. Psychomotor objectives involve supervised grossing of specimens, microscopy rounds, and photomicrography. Affective objectives aim to value the importance of histopathologic evaluation and cataloguing specimens and reports.
The document discusses the results of a study on the impact of COVID-19 lockdowns on air pollution. Researchers analyzed data from dozens of countries and found that lockdowns led to an average decline of nearly 30% in nitrogen dioxide levels across major cities. However, they also observed that the reductions in air pollution were temporary and that levels began to rise again as restrictions eased and human activity increased.
This document discusses the relationship between science and various sports. It provides examples of how science influences football by examining kicking distance and trajectory. It also explores the scientific concepts behind basketball shots, auto racing aerodynamics, golf ball flight patterns, baseball pitching biomechanics, soccer ball spin, tennis ball bounce, and other sports like skateboarding and martial arts. In conclusion, the document explains that science affects sports and sports continue to evolve through the application of scientific principles.
Cities are becoming the most prominent context for social change in the world today, and they offer exciting opportunities for participative governance. A model of “systematic civic stewardship” frames the city as community-based, action-learning system. Leaders play key roles in neighborhood teams focused on local challenges (graduation rates, health outcomes, etc.), while learning and working with peers via city-wide communities of practice. We have much to learn about learning systems in any context—understanding how they work in communities and cities draws on organization experience and provokes new insights.
The Council on Aging & Human Services (COA-HS) is a nonprofit organization that provides services like care management, nutrition, transportation, and home care to communities in eastern Washington and northern Idaho. It aims to enhance lives and strengthen communities. COA-HS wants to better inform the public about its programs and services to help more people, especially seniors who are often prideful about asking for help. Its strategic plan includes conducting surveys and focus groups with seniors, promoting its programs through various media placements targeted at different audiences, and engaging the WSU community through volunteer opportunities and advertising.
The document summarizes Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield's community involvement efforts in Maine during 2014. It discusses how the company contributed over $1.4 million to nonprofit organizations through donations, foundation grants, and employee giving. It highlights several community health programs the company supported, including initiatives to promote physical activity, prevent chronic diseases, and provide vision screenings to students. The report demonstrates Anthem's commitment to improving the health and well-being of Maine residents.
The document summarizes key findings from a survey on physical activity and walkable communities in Simcoe Muskoka, Ontario. The survey found that over a third of respondents did not have trails or paths within a 10-minute walk of home, but over 75% supported adding them. Nearly 70% were unaware of the term "walkable community" but awareness could influence physical activity levels. Recommendations included education campaigns promoting walkable communities and conducting additional surveys to identify infrastructure needs.
Building social infrastructure - United Way of Metropolitan ChicagoUnitedWay YorkRegion
United Way of Metropolitan Chicago is working to improve lives in Chicagoland communities that are facing challenges including rising poverty, poor education outcomes, lack of health care access, and urban violence. The needs in these communities have grown as public resources have shrunk. United Way is transforming its approach from solely funding agencies to taking a leadership role in convening partners to address the root causes of these issues. It has launched LIVE UNITED Neighborhood Networks in specific communities using a hub and spoke service model to integrate education, income, and health services. Initial results from the Brighton Park Network include expanded early childhood education, a parent mentor program in schools, tax assistance generating refunds, and a health promoters program engaging parents to
The KidsWalk Coalition in New Orleans worked from 2010 to 2014 to promote walking and bicycling through partnerships between non-profits, the city government, and community organizations. The coalition grew to over 25 partners, published reports on neighborhood walkability, and assisted the city in adopting bikeability and accessibility policies and plans. However, more work is still needed to engage the public, ensure consistent leadership, collect data, and implement improvements to make streets safer for all users.
United Way of Greater Milwaukee raised a record $51.6 million in 2012 through their annual community campaign. They invested nearly $42 million to support over 160 programs across 80 agencies focused on education, income, and health. Key accomplishments included reducing teen pregnancy rates, expanding early childhood literacy programs, and increasing access to healthcare. United Way ensures donor dollars are used efficiently, with nearly 90% invested directly in supported programs.
Power Smart Business Operations with Real-Time Process Intelligence - Solutio...Beyond Technologies
The sooner you detect and act upon threats and opportunities, the sooner you can move your business forward. With complete visibility into end-to-end
business processes and an understanding of where to focus, your frontline employees are empowered to make better and faster decisions during daily business operations in real time.
Science Buddies Staff. (2014, April 21). Follow the Bouncing Ball: A Web Animation Project. Retrieved July 25, 2014 from http://www.sciencebuddies.org/science-fair-projects/project_ideas/CompSci_p012.shtml
This document summarizes email statistics from 2012 to 2016. It found that total worldwide daily emails increased from 144.8 billion to 192.2 billion over this period, with business emails growing from 89 billion to 143.8 billion per day (a 13% annual increase) and consumer emails declining slightly from 55.8 billion to 48.4 billion per day (a 3% annual decrease).
This document discusses patient confidentiality training requirements under HIPAA. It provides an overview of what HIPAA is, what protected health information it covers, and penalties for violations. It states that all employees with access to patient information must be trained. Training is required at employee orientation and annually, and can be done in-person. The training covers how employers use protected health information, precautions taken to ensure confidentiality, and privacy policies and procedures.
Save planet earth [autosaved] by lawrence aaron roque youngbloodAaron Aaron
The document discusses various ways that humans can help save the Earth from environmental problems. It suggests planting more trees to increase oxygen and stop cutting down rainforests. It also recommends switching to hybrid vehicles and renewable energy to reduce fossil fuel usage. Recycling is presented as an easy way for everyone to help by following the three R's: reduce, reuse, recycle. The document emphasizes that the world is precious and must be protected for future generations.
The New MOTOTRBO SL300 is an ultra-light and thin two-way radio that weighs half a can of soup, is less than an inch thick, and will fit into a purse, making it perfect for teachers, administrators, managers, supervisors and others. RCS is offering a free demo and 20% off the MSRP of the SL300 UHF two-way radio, with prices starting at $583.
The document is a curriculum vitae for Rahul Duryodhan Atpadkar. It summarizes his educational qualifications including a M.Sc. in Industrial Chemistry, technical skills like spectroscopy and chromatography, work experience in quality control and testing at a pharmaceutical company, and lists referees.
Este documento presenta un proyecto diseñado por Annell Pulido Dominguez para introducir a niños preescolares a la tecnología de una manera educativa. El proyecto involucra actividades en línea guiadas por la maestra y realizadas con la ayuda de los padres para familiarizar a los niños con herramientas tecnológicas y mostrarles sus beneficios educativos. El proyecto se evaluará a través de anécdotas sobre las actividades realizadas y abarcará los seis campos formativos de manera lúdic
This document outlines the standard operating procedures for the Section of Ophthalmic Pathology at the DOH Eye Center. It includes learning objectives in cognitive, psychomotor, and affective domains. For the cognitive objectives, teaching-learning activities include large and small group discussions, independent study, and written/oral exams. Psychomotor objectives involve supervised grossing of specimens, microscopy rounds, and photomicrography. Affective objectives aim to value the importance of histopathologic evaluation and cataloguing specimens and reports.
The document discusses the results of a study on the impact of COVID-19 lockdowns on air pollution. Researchers analyzed data from dozens of countries and found that lockdowns led to an average decline of nearly 30% in nitrogen dioxide levels across major cities. However, they also observed that the reductions in air pollution were temporary and that levels began to rise again as restrictions eased and human activity increased.
This document discusses the relationship between science and various sports. It provides examples of how science influences football by examining kicking distance and trajectory. It also explores the scientific concepts behind basketball shots, auto racing aerodynamics, golf ball flight patterns, baseball pitching biomechanics, soccer ball spin, tennis ball bounce, and other sports like skateboarding and martial arts. In conclusion, the document explains that science affects sports and sports continue to evolve through the application of scientific principles.
Cities are becoming the most prominent context for social change in the world today, and they offer exciting opportunities for participative governance. A model of “systematic civic stewardship” frames the city as community-based, action-learning system. Leaders play key roles in neighborhood teams focused on local challenges (graduation rates, health outcomes, etc.), while learning and working with peers via city-wide communities of practice. We have much to learn about learning systems in any context—understanding how they work in communities and cities draws on organization experience and provokes new insights.
The Council on Aging & Human Services (COA-HS) is a nonprofit organization that provides services like care management, nutrition, transportation, and home care to communities in eastern Washington and northern Idaho. It aims to enhance lives and strengthen communities. COA-HS wants to better inform the public about its programs and services to help more people, especially seniors who are often prideful about asking for help. Its strategic plan includes conducting surveys and focus groups with seniors, promoting its programs through various media placements targeted at different audiences, and engaging the WSU community through volunteer opportunities and advertising.
The document summarizes Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield's community involvement efforts in Maine during 2014. It discusses how the company contributed over $1.4 million to nonprofit organizations through donations, foundation grants, and employee giving. It highlights several community health programs the company supported, including initiatives to promote physical activity, prevent chronic diseases, and provide vision screenings to students. The report demonstrates Anthem's commitment to improving the health and well-being of Maine residents.
The document summarizes key findings from a survey on physical activity and walkable communities in Simcoe Muskoka, Ontario. The survey found that over a third of respondents did not have trails or paths within a 10-minute walk of home, but over 75% supported adding them. Nearly 70% were unaware of the term "walkable community" but awareness could influence physical activity levels. Recommendations included education campaigns promoting walkable communities and conducting additional surveys to identify infrastructure needs.
Building social infrastructure - United Way of Metropolitan ChicagoUnitedWay YorkRegion
United Way of Metropolitan Chicago is working to improve lives in Chicagoland communities that are facing challenges including rising poverty, poor education outcomes, lack of health care access, and urban violence. The needs in these communities have grown as public resources have shrunk. United Way is transforming its approach from solely funding agencies to taking a leadership role in convening partners to address the root causes of these issues. It has launched LIVE UNITED Neighborhood Networks in specific communities using a hub and spoke service model to integrate education, income, and health services. Initial results from the Brighton Park Network include expanded early childhood education, a parent mentor program in schools, tax assistance generating refunds, and a health promoters program engaging parents to
The KidsWalk Coalition in New Orleans worked from 2010 to 2014 to promote walking and bicycling through partnerships between non-profits, the city government, and community organizations. The coalition grew to over 25 partners, published reports on neighborhood walkability, and assisted the city in adopting bikeability and accessibility policies and plans. However, more work is still needed to engage the public, ensure consistent leadership, collect data, and implement improvements to make streets safer for all users.
United Way of Greater Milwaukee raised a record $51.6 million in 2012 through their annual community campaign. They invested nearly $42 million to support over 160 programs across 80 agencies focused on education, income, and health. Key accomplishments included reducing teen pregnancy rates, expanding early childhood literacy programs, and increasing access to healthcare. United Way ensures donor dollars are used efficiently, with nearly 90% invested directly in supported programs.
Advancing Racial Equity through Community Engagement in Collective ImpactLiving Cities
This document outlines an agenda for a panel discussion on advancing racial equity through community engagement in collective impact work. The agenda includes an overview, four panelists from different organizations, and a question and answer session. The panelists discuss their experiences engaging communities and advancing equity in their collective impact work, including lessons learned and advice for other practitioners. They emphasize the importance of relationship building, disaggregating data, youth engagement, and addressing power imbalances to do this work effectively.
CJA is monitoring the development of the field of catalyst initiatives. Catalysts seek to help local regions transform health and health care in their regions. This is the first in the series.
Cindy McAsey - Be Barefoot - Opportunity Presentation 2020Cindy McAsey
I'm so blessed to have stumbled onto the Shaklee business over 20 years ago. I can't imagine what my life would look like today if it wasn't for all the benefits Shaklee has blessed me with.
An all expense trip to Costa Rica in a few weeks is one of them. If you have ever had the itch to live a life most people only dream of we really should visit soon. Just google me... and reach out!
The document outlines two social impact projects focused on air pollution from transportation and promoting healthy lifestyles in Indonesia.
For the transportation project, the mission is to reduce air pollution by increasing knowledge about efficient transportation use. Strategies include educating youth on public transit, biking, and walking. The intern role involves coordinating campaigns and creating transportation maps.
For healthy lifestyles, the mission is to reduce lung/heart disease and increase healthy communities by 50%. Strategies target decreasing smoking, improving diets and exercise. The intern will help organize events, visit patients, and share learnings through social media.
This document summarizes an webinar on how parks and recreation agencies can integrate quality of life elements. It discusses how parks and recreation can address current challenges and provide crucial health opportunities. Specific innovations discussed include preventing health issues, addressing social and mental health needs, homelessness, transportation, resiliency, stormwater management, and overall public health. The webinar advocates for a systematic approach involving stakeholders, data collection, identifying gaps, and creating an action plan. Key recommendations are for recreation centers to serve as wellness hubs, improving active transportation and physical activity, improved nutrition, and increased social and health equity.
Innovations in Integrating Quality of Life Elements - 2020Jodi Rudick
This document summarizes an webinar on how parks and recreation agencies can integrate quality of life elements. It discusses how parks and recreation can address current challenges and provide crucial health opportunities. Specific innovations discussed include preventing health issues, addressing social and mental health needs, homelessness, transportation, resiliency, stormwater management, and overall public health. The webinar advocates for a systematic approach involving stakeholders, data collection, identifying gaps, and creating an action plan. Key opportunities for parks and recreation include wellness hubs, improved active transportation, better nutrition, and increased social equity.
Presentation from NACCHO 2013 Annual Conference featuring Erica Salem, MPH, Deputy Commissioner, Chicago Department of Public Health, Kathleen Dickhut, BA, MSLA, Deputy Commissioner, City of Chicago Department of Housing and Economic Development, Luann Hamilton, BA, MS, Deputy Commissioner, Chicago Department of Transportation, and Stephanie Whyte, MBA, FAAP, Chief Health Office, Chicago Public Schools.
This session highlights how non-public health City of Chicago agencies work with the Chicago Public Health Department to develop and implement a broad array of policy, systems, environmental, and programmatic solutions to public health challenges. While the work is occurring under a unified framework, each agency is able to contribute while fulfilling its unique mission.
Walking Mississippi-A Suggested Health Campaign Against ObesityEydie Pullman
The document proposes a health campaign called "Walking Mississippi" to address obesity in the state. It recommends starting walking programs through schools and health departments, funding communities that host walking events, and improving parks and recreation areas. Challenges include a high illiteracy rate and hot summer weather. Tracking data from health organizations can help monitor trends and promote healthier habits. The campaign aims to get Mississippi residents to be more active through low-cost walking programs.
The document summarizes a community health assessment conducted in Marquette County, Michigan in 2012. It identifies the top three health priorities as: 1) obesity prevention through healthy living and lifestyle changes, 2) substance abuse prevention including reducing tobacco use, and 3) improving access to health resources. A team consisting of local health departments, hospitals, and other organizations conducted extensive research, data analysis, and input from community members to identify these priorities and develop strategies and initiatives to address them over the next three years.
The document outlines the Active Healthy Kids Canada organization and its annual Report Card on Physical Activity for Children and Youth. The Report Card is a communications and advocacy tool that provides a "state of the nation" assessment each year on Canada's performance in providing physical activity opportunities for children and youth. It evaluates indicators across sectors like schools, communities, government policies, and assigns letter grades. The Report Card has significant reach and influence, helping to increase awareness, guide investments and partnerships, and influence policies to improve physical activity among Canadian youth.
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Million Mile Month - What is it and how does it work
1.
2. Million Mile Month
Million Mile Month™ challenges people to complete one million miles of
physical activity, together as one community, in one month (April 2015).
THE ISSUE:
“Sitting is the new smoking”. One in three children and 70% of adults in the USA are
overweight or obese, resulting in over $190 billion in health care costs annually.*
2*Cawley J, Meyerhoefer C. The medical care costs of obesity: an instrumental variables approach. Journal of Health Economics. 31(1):219-230. 2012.
Ogden CL, Carroll MD, Kit BK, Flegal KM. Prevalence of childhood and adult obesity in the United States, 2011-2012. Journal of the American Medical Association 2014;311(8):806-814.
WHY SUPPORT MILLION MILE MONTH:
• It motivates people to get active in a fun, simple way.
• It engages people in a supportive community focused on
accomplishing a goal together (1 million miles).
• It is a great way to get employees engaged and active
without having to build a program yourself.
3. Million Mile Month
3
• a month-long event – to help establish healthy habits and routines
• flexibility – participants log miles when and where it meets their schedule
• simple web tools – easy to log miles, set goals, and stay connected
• the ability to track personal and group/company accomplishments
• supporting a variety of physical activities (running, walking, biking, yoga…)
• aggregating participants’ activity from all other races, programs and events.
MILLION MILE MONTH
Unique to a one day race/event, MMM motivates people through:
4. 1. LOGGING MILES (Personal Profiles)
Each person has a personal profile to
log physical activity by entering miles or
minutes and selecting an activity from
the pull-down (run, walk, bike, etc.).
Activity is then added to the individual’s
stats for MILES, CALORIES, MINUTES
and toward their GOAL.
How MMM Works
2. COMMUNITY MILEAGE TICKER (Homepage)
Individual stats are added to the
community-wide mileage ticker on the
homepage as we work move toward 1
million miles together.
4
5. How MMM Works3. REWARDS (MILEstone Prizes)
As the community reaches “MILEstones”
on the way to 1 million miles (100k, 200k,
etc.), prizes are awarded to participants
who have logged miles to help reach that
milestone.
5
4. EMPLOYEE WELLNESS (Organization Page)
MMM is a fun employee wellness
program/event with real metrics. Each
company receives their own
“ORGANIZATION PAGE” (accessible
only by its members).
This page is a Leaderboard and stats
sheet for that company, and serves as a
source of camaraderie and friendly
competition.
6. 5. LEADERBOARDS
6. ON-GOING ENGAGEMENT (Social, E-letters…)
City and State Leaderboards provide
both recognition and friendly competition
between cities, organizations and
individuals. See the MMM Leaderboard
page here.
Participants are engaged year-round with
health tips, discounts, resources and
challenges; delivered through social media,
e-letters, website, partners, etc.
The MMM community is highly engaged,
and feels personally and emotionally
connected to MMM’s goals. 6
7. 7,584
Participants
396,907
Miles Logged
32.5
Million
Calories Burned
4 Million
Minutes of
activity
Last Year’s Event: MMM 2014 (Pilot Year – April 2014)
79
# of miles per
active
participant
7
“other” includes activities like CrossFit, Zumba, yoga, etc.
Number of Miles Logged By Activity:
running 79,194
skateboarding 2,235
walking 159,000
swimming 5,184
other 110,150
cycling 77,868
8. MMM Participant Snap Shot
• “My son and I signed up together. Our first week
I lost 10 pounds and my son lost 12! After the
month was over, we had lost almost 50 lbs! We
continue to exercise and eat right every day.”
• “I saw first-hand I was setting a great example for
my four year old daughter. I caught her running on
the turned off treadmill one day and she turned to me
and told me she was exercising like mom!”
33% 18 and younger
26% 19-35 years old
17% 36-45 years old
24% 46 and older
28% Male
72% Female
66% participated as part of
an organization or company
8
Highly Engaged Users • 80% increased their physical activity
• 52% said they ate healthier
• 95% said the MMM website is easy to use
Survey responses from over 950 MMM
participants in less than 48 hours said:
9. 9
“We look forward to working with you and growing our efforts together. We see
great value in our partnership and are looking forward to MMM 2015.”
– Catherine Oliveros, Director of Community Affairs, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Texas
“I’m so impressed with you and your team. The 2014 MMM pilot was a big success.”
– Katie Stolp, Employee Comm. & Community Relations Manager, Silicon Labs
2014 Sponsor Testimonials
“Million Mile Month has been a great event for us. It helps us reach both hardcore
athletes and those who are just starting their fitness adventures.”
– Mike Kauffman, Founder, Pocket Protein
10. Social and Media Outreach
10
Over 1 million people
reached through
partners, social and
traditional media!
11. MMM Celebration at Astros’ Major League Park with Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Texas
Austin City Hall kick-off w/ govt, corporate, fitness community
leaders (Police Chief Acevedo, Rip Esselstyn (Engine 2 Diet Author), Mayor Pro
Tem Sheryl Cole, Councilman Chris Riley, SI Labs Dave Bresemann, MMM staff)
Catalyst for Events
Houston kick-off w/Mayor Parker at Little League Park
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13. Green Ribbon Schools
Million Mile Month is a program by Cyberways and Waterways (CW),
a 501c3 nonprofit. CW develops innovative programs that engage kids
and their families in thinking and taking actions around personal health,
sustainability initiatives and STEM (science, technology, engineering,
math) education.
Funds from the MMM program will help provide and enhance
CW’s education programs, Healthivores and Green Ribbon
Schools, for schools and community organizations.
Healthivores encourages students to think and take action
on their personal health. Healthivores’ Video Game Design,
which guides students through the process of creating their
own video games that teach a health, fitness or nutrition
lesson. This has become an annual contest with entries
from kids across the nation.
Green Ribbon Schools (GRS) is a shared knowledge
network where participants publicly document the projects
they are doing each year while earning recognition and
awards. GRS encourages STEM, health, environmental and
nature projects. With 850+ schools across 40 states,
GRS has proven to be a program that is replicable and
scalable to all schools.
CW engages kids and adults within their local communities
and connects them regionally and nationally. CW’s vision is
to connect participants globally. CW has been contacted by
folks ranging from Canada, Australia, India, Gambia, to Venezuela.
Healthivores
Organization Background
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