The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Grant targets disease in African-Americans

$792K to help DeKalb’s efforts to reduce such health problems.

- By Raisa Habersham Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on

At Stronghold Christian Church, you’re just as likely to see fitness buffs as you are worshipers.

The Lithonia church hosts at least four fitness classes a week to promote health and wellness. It is also a part of DeKalb County’s larger initiative to address health disparitie­s among African-Americans.

Earlier this month, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention awarded the DeKalb County Health Board a REACH grant, worth $792,000 for the next five years, to reduce the level of chronic disease among blacks in the county.

The county was first awarded the REACH grant in 2014, allowing it to partner with local organizati­ons that could provide health and fitness opportunit­ies for free or at a low cost, said DeKalb health board community liaison Kelly Clay.

Part of that work is focused in neighborho­ods where at least 20 percent of the population is below the poverty threshold. African-Americans make up at least 20 percent of these areas and are about 69 percent of the population in DeKalb, Clay said.

“We want to strengthen our partnershi­p in the community,” she told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on. “We just want to make sure we’re providing the best resources to the community and that people are aware of them.”

Stronghold Christian Church was one of the first organizati­ons to partner with DeKalb for residents in Lithonia, a city where African-Americans comprise 91.8 percent of the population and 16.1 percent of its residents live under the poverty threshold.

“We’re not your average gym where you take a class and leave,” said fitness instructor Donna Jones. The program, which began in 2016, has seen success stories.

Jones said in one participan­t’s case, the workouts saved her life.

“There was one woman who suffered a mild stroke,” Jones said. “The doctors said had she not been working out, it could’ve been a different story.”

Cardiovasc­ular disease is the second leading cause of death in the county, according to the DeKalb board of health. Clay is hoping similar programs like the one at Stronghold Christian Church will curb the health issues African-Americans in the county face.

“We wanted to open (community partners’) doors and make themselves accessible to community in which they serve,” Clay said.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY PHIL SKINNER ?? The DeKalb County Health Board was given a REACH grant by the CDC. The grant will help the county increase programs aimed at health disparitie­s among African-Americans.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY PHIL SKINNER The DeKalb County Health Board was given a REACH grant by the CDC. The grant will help the county increase programs aimed at health disparitie­s among African-Americans.

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