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Addressing Obesity in Partnership with Community Health Centers | Overview

Paper plates with fruits, vegetables lay on table

For more than a decade, Boston Children’s Hospital has worked to address disproportionately high rates of childhood obesity in low-income Boston neighborhoods through its Healthy in the City program.

Healthy in the City is a community-based program that uses a case management model and family-based approach to healthy weight promotion. The program is implemented at 10 community health centers throughout the city and serves 1,000 children annually – 98 percent of whom identify as Black, Latino, or Asian. Program participants are either overweight or obese or at risk for obesity.

A case manager at each health center site provides families with resources and support to achieve their health goals and maintain a healthy weight. Case managers can offer nutrition counseling and education, cooking classes, and physical activity opportunities. “Cooking classes and grocery store gift cards give families the opportunity to try nutritional foods that they may not have chosen or had access to,” says a case manager from one of the health center sites.

In more recent years, the program has expanded its focus to also address food insecurity among families, many of whom live in neighborhoods that lack access to fresh food. Case managers coordinate food access initiatives at the health centers, including mobile produce markets, food distribution efforts, and community gardening programs. They also connect families to food pantries, hunger hotlines, federal nutrition programs, and opportunities to purchase fresh produce. Health education is offered to help families with how to use food pantry items to make healthy meals or how to shop for groceries on a budget.

“We have been through food financial hardships several times, everything is so expensive. Being able to provide fruits and vegetables to my kids, and having them eat the five food groups is a big deal. Yesterday, my kids were able to eat well. I just want to say thank you so much for contributing to a better home for us,” says a parent of a Healthy in the City participant.

Each year more than two-thirds of participants in Healthy in the City are shown to reduce their Body Mass Index (BMI), a key indicator of program effectiveness. They also report healthier lifestyle changes — increased consumption of fruits and vegetables, decreased consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages, and greater time spent exercising.

Boston Children's Healthy in the City Program has 10 Tips for Families, available in English and Spanish.

Healthy in the City: Community Health Center Partners

Health center Neighborhood
Boston Community Pediatrics South End
Bowdoin Street Health Center Dorchester
Brookside Community Health Center Jamaica Plain
Charles River Community Health Brighton
The Dimock Center Roxbury
East Boston Neighborhood Health Center (NeighborHealth) East Boston
Mattapan Community Health Center Mattapan
South End Community Health Center (NeighborHealth) South End
Southern Jamaica Plain Health Center Jamaica Plain
Upham's Community Care Dorchester

Updated: July 2024