Change Club Study seeks residents to help improve health

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A university-led, paid study called Change Club offers Lamb and Castro County residents an opportunity to engage their community by exploring ways to improve the health of its residents.

As a part of the study, Change Club, led by Texas A&M AgriLife and Cornell University, will implement a new community-change project that attempts to make healthy and physical activity easier for Castro and Lamb County residents.

Change Club study will the use information collected to study the effectiveness of other, similarly focused community-change projects, Their hope is to inform stronger projects for promoting health.

The Change Club study has recruited members to join a committee, which will lead the charge by identifying prospective areas for healthy improvement across the built environment-the places where town residents like you live, work and play.

Change Club members will receive limited funding to complete the projects selected for their communities.

“This infusion of money, solely focused on improving the built environment, is really a great opportunity for Castro and Lamb County to begin thinking about how it will improve the health of its residents in a measurable way, long term” said Courtney Lowe.

Participants could earn up to $250 over the course of the study for completing data collection ac-tivities annually from approximately 2021 to 2024. Data collection activities include completing online survey and an online food diary: wearing a physical activity tracker (pedometer) for 7 days: providing physical measurements including height, weight, blood pressure, and heart rate: and providing a fasting blood sample to assess your glucose and lipids.

Castro and Lamb County residents can join the Change Club Study by visiting changeclubstudy.org today. Contact Courtney Lowe for more information or browse the Change Club website to find out more about creating healthy communities together.