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US Government Health Promotion Resources

We highlight top US government tools and information to support your wellness program’s mission.

Steps to a HealthierUS (www.healthierus.gov/steps/) — advances the goal of helping Americans live longer, better, and healthier; targets diabetes, obesity, asthma, heart disease, stroke, and cancer as well as poor nutrition, physical inactivity, tobacco use, and youth risk taking.

Dietary Guidelines for Americans 2005 (www.healthierus.gov/dietaryguidelines/) — mandated as the basis for federal nutrition education activities; published with the Dept of Agriculture every 5 years since 1980.

healthfinder® (www.healthfinder.gov) — gateway website linking consumers and professionals to 6,000+ health information resources.

Healthy People 2010 (www.healthypeople.gov) — comprehensive disease prevention and health promotion goals for the first decade of the 21st century.

Healthy People 2010 Health Communication Focus Area (www.healthypeople.gov/document/HTML/Volume1/11HealthCom.htm) — 6 key issues: diffusion of the Internet to households, quality of health sites, health literacy, provider-patient communication, research and evaluation, and centers of excellence.

National Health Information Center (www.health.gov/nhic) — clearinghouse and referral service using a database of 1700+ associations, agencies, and other organizations.

Prevention Communication Research Database (www.health.gov/communication/) — searchable findings from Health & Human Services research that may not be widely known or published in peer-reviewed journals.

National Women’s Health Information Center (www.womenshealth.gov) — reliable, current information on 800+ women’s health topics.

MedlinePlus (http://medlineplus.gov) — goldmine of authoritative, up-to-date health information from the world’s largest medical library, the National Library of Medicine.

2006 National Health Observances Calendar (www.healthfinder.gov/library/nho/nho.pdf) — ideas for holding health promotion events, stimulating awareness of health risks, or focusing on disease prevention.