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The healthy side of stimulus spending: Weight Watchers and access to a gym

BOOSTER SHOTS: Oddities, musings and news from the
health world

February 16, 2011
  • Tynesha Ross, shown here with her niece Naija Ross, left, 12, and daughter Kyla Teagle, 6, was enrolled in a pilot weight-loss program offered by the city of Baltimore.
Tynesha Ross, shown here with her niece Naija Ross, left, 12, and daughter… (Barbara Haddock Taylor…)

Stimulus money, where did it all go? Some went to sending women to Weight Watchers and a local gym to help them get in shape before they start having children.

The idea was to try to reduce Baltimore's infant mortality rate, which is almost twice that of the state. A Baltimore Sun story explains how the city used federal funds to develop the program for women in their teens through mid-30s. It says:

"To make a true dent in the problem, officials realized, they needed to focus on women's health before conception. Last year, Health Department staff began noticing more overweight women entering their home-visiting programs, which aid low-income women in high-risk pregnancies. And in examining the city's 128 fetal and infant deaths in 2009, many of the births were to overweight and obese women, they found."

The women in the program did shed weight, and officials are seeking more federal funds to extend the program. But it won't come from stimulus money -- that’s long gone.

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