TEC News

TEC News

News from the Northwest Tribal Epidemiology Center

TEC Event, TEC News
Native Fitness XIV 2017

This year marks the 14th year for the Western Tribal Diabetes Project coordinating the Native Fitness Event. The Event is hosted at the Nike World Headquarters in Beaverton Oregon, and continues to be a huge success. On August 30 and 31st, 2017, participants from tribal SDPI programs across the country will converge on the Tiger Woods Center to participate in this interactive event.

 

The event features 20 breakout sessions: chair circuit for elders, living lean, sports speed system, mixed martial arts, fitness for kids, group fitness, natural running, power hour, and a nutrition and healthy cooking demonstration class.

 

Other topics on the agenda include presentations on Motivation interviewing and historical trauma in Native communities, an update from the N7 Nike program, and the Western Tribal Diabetes project data/tracking and audit issues. Most important however, is the opportunity for programs across the country to network and share successes and challenges in our SDPI programs. The evaluations from Native Fitness last year were excellent, and we are looking forward to our 2017 event.

Native Fitness XIV Agenda
2017 Registration Form

AASTEC Hosts Remembering When

TEC News
A Train-the-Trainer Program for Fire and Fall Prevention among Older Adults
At the end of July, the AASTEC Tribal Injury Prevention Program hosted a train-the-trainer event for 52 tribal health program participants from 17 Area Tribes focused on evidence-based best practices for fire and fall prevention among older adults.

 

The workshop was based on the National Fire Protection Association’s “Remembering When” curriculum, which aims to build participant capacity to develop and implement comprehensive community-based fire and fall prevention programs for older adults.

 

Remembering When is centered around 16 key safety messages – eight fire prevention and eight fall prevention – developed by experts from national and local safety organizations. It is designed to be implemented by multi-sector community-based coalitions encompassing the local fire department, EMS, health care professionals, wellness/fitness centers, senior centers and other related programs. The program is flexible enough to allow participants to determine how to best to adapt it for implementation within their local community in a manner that acknowledges and respects important cultural considerations. The 2-day workshop also provided excellent networking opportunities for participants to connect with each other and share success stories and lessons learned when implementing safety programs for tribal elders in their respective communities.

Remembering When

Remembering When

Tribal Injury Prevention Program


AASTEC-Logo

Project Management Essentials

TEC Event
August 2-3, 2017

This course introduces project management concepts and sets a baseline for understanding terminology. It provides students with techniques to effectively manage and participate in small projects. Students will learn to apply elemental basics of project management to their work and create action plans for on-the-job application.

Register
Flyer
Agenda


2017 National Tribal Public Health Summit

TEC Event, TEC News
The 2017 National Tribal Public Health Summit was held June 6-8 at the Dena’ina Center in Anchorage, AK.

 

“Together We Rise: Sustaining Tribal Public Health as a National Priority”

 

Conference Tracks:

  • Health Promotion and Disease Prevention
  • Public Health Policy, Infrastructure and Capacity
  • Substance Misuse and Behavioral Health
  • Climate Change and Environmental Health
  • Empowering Youth Wellness

 

NIHB Tribal Public Health Summit website.

TEC table at NIHB Tribal Public Health SummitTEC table at NIHB Tribal Public Health Summit.

2017 CTEC Summer Research Assistant Program

TEC News
The California Tribal Epidemiology Center (CTEC) kicked off the 2017 Summer Research Assistant Program with an orientation in Sacramento, CA, on June 15.

 

This year, CTEC staff will mentor 3 students working at Tribal and Urban Indian Health Programs in Northern and Central California.

 

Students’ work will be guided by epidemiologic and evaluation-related projects the Health Programs would like assistance with over the summer.

Summer Research Assistant Program