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In this issue


  1. Welcome
  2. OA Action Alliance Program Updates
  3. Upcoming OA Action Alliance Events
  4. Work Group Updates
  5. Take Action Now!

Director’s Corner

Thank you to all of our members for their patience as we moved through our transition toward a new organizational structure that includes 5 work groups focused on coalition goals. Since our 2015 Strategic Planning meeting in April, we are excited to announce that our work group leaders and our new Steering Committee have been confirmed. All of our new work groups have met and are currently developing strategies, objectives and activities to promote their work groups and advance the mission of the OA Action Alliance to elevate osteoarthritis as a national health priority and promote effective policy, systems and environmental solutions that address the individual and national toll of OA.What else have we done this quarter?
Whether you are a member or just a friend, we want to hear from you! Here are three ways you can help us fulfill our mission to prevent and control osteoarthritis:
(1) Fill out this short survey with your ideas on how the OA Action Alliance can work toward achieving our 5 overarching goals (i.e. Invoke policymakers, foster communities, mobilize health systems and health care professionals, educate people with osteoarthritis, prevent onset of osteoarthritis). We will share your ideas with or work group leaders.(2) Join the conversation on social media. Follow us on Twitter and Like us on Facebook. We see social media as a way for us to carry out the OA Action Alliance mission every day, to share critical information and provide the public with a better understanding of the work we do. Please like, share and retweet our posts and spread the word about our work, and remember to use the hashtag #osteoarthritis in your posts!(3) Provide us with feedback and let us know how we can improve your experience as a member of the Alliance or as a friend with interest in OA. Share your vision of how we can make the OA Action Alliance the nexus for public health research, policy, and practice for all things osteoarthritis! We would love to hear your feedback on our quarterly and biweekly newsletters. Let us know how we can better support your organization’s mission by emailing us at oaaction@unc.edu. We plan to keep you updated on our progress toward our goals as a coalition and keep you abreast of developments in our working groups and Steering Committee. In the coming months, we also look forward to the development of our lower limb injury prevention toolkit, updating our resource library, strengthening our membership by recruiting new members with relevance and interest in OA; continuing our educational Lunch & Learn seminars and providing you with a biweekly letter to continue connecting our members with resources, news, and events from all of our member organizations.On behalf of the OA Action Alliance, thank you for your continued support,
Leigh F. Callahan, PhD
Director, Osteoarthritis Action Alliance

OA Action Alliance Program Updates


The OA Action Alliance welcomes a new Steering Committee

Please join us in welcoming and congratulating our new Steering Committee! For more details please visit our website.
Steering Committee ChairTom Trojian, MD, CAQSM, FACSM, a faculty member of the Department of Family, Community & Preventive Medicine at Drexel University College of Medicine, and director of the Sports Medicine Fellowship, represents the American Medical Society of Sports Medicine (AMSSM). Dr. Trojian has extensive experience providing guidance on rule changes and state legislation on injury prevention. He is also a member of the Board of Directors for the American Medical Society of Sports Medicine (AMSSM). His experience as a practicing sports medicine physician and educator and as representative of the AMSSM were assets in his role as the OAAA Injury Prevention work group chair where he has led efforts to develop effective injury prevention strategies to prevent the onset of OA, including educational brochures of injury prevention strategies for professional and lay public audiences. He is currently leading an effort to develop a lower extremity injury prevention resource library and best practices guide for young athletes.

Steering Committee Vice ChairLaura Payne, PhD, Associate Professor and Extension Specialist in the Department of Recreation, Sport and Tourism at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC), represents the National Recreation and Park Association (NRPA). Dr. Payne has been involved with the OAAA as a representative of the National Recreation and Park Association. She is the former Physical Activity Work Group Chair and was directly involved with the development of the 2011 report Environmental and Policy Strategies to Increase Physical Activity Among Adults with Arthritis. She has remained active in OAAA efforts as a member of the physical activity working group and reviewer for the small grants program.

Work Group 1: Policy and Advocacy 
ChairMari Brick, MA, public health consultant for the National Association of Chronic Disease Directors (NACDD) and Associate Director of the Quality and Technical Assistance Center-NY at the University of Albany. Mari serves on the steering committee of the Chronic Osteoarthritis Management Initiative (COAMI) and has contributed her expertise to the OAAA as a member of the Physical Activity working group and as a reviewer for the Small Grants Program.
Work Group 2: Community Engagement

Chair: Julie Keysor, PhD, PT, Associate Professor in the Department of Physical Therapy & Athletic Training at Boston University and Director of Boston University’s Enhancing Activity and Participation among Persons with Arthritis (ENACT), which strives to bring evidence-based physical activity interventions to the communities who need them most. Dr. Keysor continues her involvement with the OAAA as a representative of the National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research (NIDILRR; nee NIDRR) Arthritis Rehabilitation and Training Center. With the OAAA and the Arthritis Foundation, she is currently developing evidence-based tools to assess the “walkability” of community areas for adults with arthritis, specifically. Dr. Keysor is a passionate promoter of physical activity as an essential component of OA management. She has been actively involved in the OAAA as the leader of the OAAA Physical Activity working group and is interested in expanding these efforts to impact communities on Group 2.
Vice Chair: Cedric X. Bryant, PhD, FACSM, Dr. Bryant is the Chief Science Officer at the American Council on Exercise (ACE) and serves as ACE’s representative to the OAAA. He is a national and international lecturer, writer and subject-matter expert and advances ACE’s mission and impact by staying at the forefront of applied physiological research, exercise training methods and health and fitness trends. Dr. Bryant’s experience with development and implementation of eLearning and other technologies to enhance the educational experience has been instrumental in launching the OAAA’s Implementation Guide to improve access to exercise for adults with arthritis across six key sectors that impact public health. He has been a generous, authoritative and extremely knowledgeable leader of the OAAA Physical Activity working group and looks forward to continuing the work of the OAAA on Group 2.
Work Group 3: Healthcare Systems & Provider Mobilization


Co-chair
Amanda Nelson MD, MSCR, RHMSUS, Assistant Professor in the UNC Thurston Arthritis Research Center. As a rheumatologist, she maintains clinical practice and research interests. She understands both the challenges and best strategies for managing OA from her experience working directly with patients in clinical care and in research. Dr. Nelson represents the American College of Rheumatology and the North Carolina Rheumatology Association. She has previously served as the Chair of the OAAA Weight Management Work Group and is interested in aligning her experience and expertise with Group 3 efforts to impact clinical care for OA.


Co-chairAlexandra (Alexe) Page, MD is an orthopedic surgeon with Kaiser Permanente. She represents the American Association of Orthopaedic Surgeons and the Chronic Osteoarthritis Management Initiative (COAMI). Dr. Page combines private practice with health services research and consulting, including an IOM work group and the Harvard Medical School Health Policy Advisory Committee Cross-specialty national involvement includes serving as the AAOS delegate to the AMA, as a steering committee member of COAMI. Regionally, she is a delegate to the California Medical Association (CMA) and is in the presidential line of the California Orthopaedic Association. As a co-Chair of the OAAA Group 3, Dr. Page will apply her collective experience impacting healthcare systems and clinical care as well as her connection to COAMI and its efforts to develop and disseminate a model of care for OA.

Work Group 5: Osteoarthritis Prevention


Chair: Jeffrey B. Driban, PhD, ATC, CSCS represents the National Athletic Trainers’ Association (NATA) and the Athletic Trainers’ Osteoarthritis Consortium (ATOAC). Dr. Driban is an Assistant Professor in the Division of Rheumatology at Tufts University School of Medicine and a member of the Special and Scientific Staff at Tufts Medical Center. Most recently, he has contributed his expertise to the OAAA Injury Prevention Working Group and its task group effort to develop a lower extremity injury prevention resource library and best practices guide. Dr. Driban looks to continue these efforts and explore new avenues to prevent OA on Group 5.

Vice Chair: Stephen P. Messier, PhD represents the Osteoarthritis Research Society International (OARSI). Dr. Messier is the Director of the J.B. Snow Biomechanics Laboratory at Wake Forest University and continues to teach undergraduate biomechanics and human gross anatomy as well as graduate biomechanics. Following 26 years of clinical research trial experience concerning osteoarthritis (OA) of the knee, his team of clinicians and researchers are recognized for their research regarding the effects of weight loss and exercise upon knee OA pain, functionality, strength and gait. Dr. Messier is an excellent addition to the OAAA Group 5 to explore efforts to prevent OA through weight management strategies.

(Work Group 4 leaders will be announced in our next newsletter – stay tuned!)


Implementation Strategies to Increase Physical Activity among Adults with Osteoarthritis Grant Program Awardees Announced

The OA Action Alliance launched its first small grant program this year. The grant program was organized by the OAAA Physical Activity Work Group and led by task group leader, Yvonne Golightly, PT, MS, PhD (representing member organization, UNC’s Thurston Arthritis Research Center and Injury Prevention Research Center).

The purpose of the grant program is to engage community organizations and to advance the objectives of the 2011 report, Environmental and Policy Strategies to Increase Physical Activity Among Adults With Arthritis, which focuses on the benefits of physical activity and ways to make it more convenient and accessible to people with arthritis.

In our first year of the small grant program, we received an overwhelmingly positive response, with nearly 40 applications from 19 states, representing a diversity of sectors and geographic locations.

The 2015 awardees include: Arizona State University and the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community Wellness Program, Wellpath; Associated Recreation Council of Seattle, and the Texas State University Employee Wellness Pilot Program

We thank all of our applicants and reviewers for their participation in this year’s small grant program! We hope to have the fund to continue this program next year. Please stay tuned for updates on our website on each of our awardees.

For more information, please find the press release here.


Stay Connected with Us

We have updated our website and launched our presence on social media platforms including Twitter and Facebook. We see social media as a way to share critical information to our members and provide the public with a better understanding of the work we do. Please like, share and retweet our posts and spread the word about our work and use the hashtag #osteoarthritis in your posts. In the upcoming quarter we hope to launch a regular e-newsletter that complements our social media presence and that highlights news, research, opportunities, events, webinars, and resources from our member organizations.

We love highlighting our work groups and member organizations! If you would like us to feature you or your organization, please send your submission to mylinh.oaaa@gmail.com

OA Action Alliance staff and members support World Arthritis Day by participating in the #WADHigh5 social media campaign hosted by EULAR to raise awareness about rheumatic and musculoskeletal diseases.For more photos from the OA Action Alliance, please visit our Facebook page. For more information on participating in the campaign, visit the World Arthritis Day website

Upcoming OA Action Alliance Events


November

  • Work Group 5 Meeting (OA prevention) | Wednesday, November 16 | 3:00-4:00pm EST
  • November Lunch & Learn with Maura Daly Iversen |  Wednesday, November 18, | 12:00pm-12:30pm EST | Register here
  • Work Group 2 Meeting (Foster communities) | Thursday, November 19| 12:00-1:00pm EST
  • 2015 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting in San Francisco, CA |  Wednesday, November 11 | 11:00am-12:30pm PST. The session titled “Bridging Research and Advocacy: The Osteoarthritis Action Alliance Update” will be moderated by Dr. Leigh F. Callahan, PhD, Director of the Osteoarthritis Action Alliance. The session will also feature the following presenters: Kirsten R. Ambrose, MS, CCRC Program Manager at the Osteoarthritis Action Alliance, Julie J. Keysor, PhD, PT of the College of Health & Rehabilitation Sciences: Sargent College, Boston University, and Yvonne Golightly, PT, MS PhD of the Department of Epidemiology and Thurston Arthritis Research Center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. If you are attending the conference, please let us know by contacting us
  • The Obesity Week Conference in Los Angeles, CA | November 6, 2015 in Los Angeles, CA | 8:00-9:30am PST. The symposium will be directed by Steven Heymsfield. MD; George A. Bray, Jr. Endowed Super Chair in Nutrition, Professor; Pennington Biomedical Research Center; Louisiana State University (also a speaker on the symposium panel). The panel will also feature the following presenters: Timothy M. Griffin, Ph.D; Associate Member, Aging & Metabolism Research Program; Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation; Stephen P. Messier, PhD; Professor; Director, J. B. Snow Biomechanics Laboratory; Director, Wake Forest University Runners’ Clinic; Department of Health and Exercise Science; Wake Forest University

December

  • December Lunch & Learn with Jeffrey N. Katz | Wednesday December 16, 2015 | 12:00pm-12:30pm EST | Register here
  • Work Group 3 Meeting (Mobilize Healthcare Systems and Providers) | early Dec TBD
  • Steering Committee Meeting (closed) |early Dec TBD

Please email us at oaaction@unc.edu if you are interested in presenting during an upcoming Lunch & Learn webinar.

If you are interested in joining one of our work groups, please contact the Chair or Vice Chair of that work group (see below for more information).

Work Group Updates


Our new work groups all began meeting in October and are currently developing strategies, objectives and activities to promote their work group goals and advance the mission of the OA Action Alliance using the 2010 National Public Health Agenda for Osteoarthritis, the 2015 Strategic Planning Meeting and Healthy People 2020 as a Blueprint. If you haven’t done so already, you can choose to participate in a new work group(s) or a task force. If you are interested in learning more about a work group or work groups, please contact the work group chair (information below) or our staff coordinator for the group. Program Manager, Kirsten Ambrose  (kirsten_ambrose@med.unc.edu) will be working as the lead coordinator for groups 2 and 3. Assistant Program Manager, My-Linh Luong (mylinh.oaaa@gmail.com) will be working as the lead coordinator for groups 1, 4 and 5. Please note that you do not need to be affiliated with a member organization to participate on our work groups.

Policy & Advocacy Work Group Updates

  • OA Action Alliance staff participated in Hill Days for the Rally for Medical Research and the ACR Advocates for Arthritis conference
  • We have contacted all members of the Congressional Arthritis Caucus
  • Join this work group if you are interested in involving policymakers at all levels in all sectors to make OA a public health priority. If you have an interest or background in public policy or government affairs, please contact My-Linh Luong or our work group chair, Mari Brick
  • We are seeking a vice chair for this work group

Please contact Chair Mari Brick, for more information.

Foster Communities Work Group Updates

  • A Small Grant task force, led by Yvonne Golightly, PhD, PT, launched a small grant program to promote the Environmental and Policy Strategies to Increase Physical Activity Among Adults With Arthritis – Implementation Guide Mini Grant Program. Awardees were recently announced.
  • Community-based walkability audit for adults with arthritis and white papers reviewing OA and physical activity are in progress.
  • A Membership Resources task force reached out to all of our member organizations and has begun compiling resources to develop a comprehensive OA Action Alliance Resource Library. Are you a member organization that forgot to fill out a survey? If so, it is not too late! Please fill out a survey today: Please stay tuned for the new and improved OA Action Alliance resource library!

Please contact Chair Julie J. Keysor, PhD, PT (jkeysor@bu.edu) or Vice Chair Cedric X. Bryant, PhD, FACSM (Cedric.Bryant@acefitness.org) for more information.

Healthcare Systems and Provider Mobilization Work Group Updates

Please contact Co-Chair Amanda Nelson, MD, MSCR, RhMSUS (amanda_nelson@med.unc.edu) for more information.

Osteoarthritis Prevention Work Group Updates

  • Within this work group, a task force, led by Tom Trojian, MD, is currently developing guidelines for an ACL/Lower Extremity Injury Prevention Toolkit. We are preparing our Executive Summary and draft ACL Injury Prevention Guidelines for review.

Please contact Chair: Jeff Driban, PhD for more information about the work group and task force.

Take Action Now!


Again, here are three ways you can support the OA Action Alliance
(1) Fill out this short survey with your ideas on how the OA Action Alliance can work toward achieving our 5 overarching goals
(2) Engage with us on social media. Follow us on Twitter and Like us on Facebook.  Check out our website and share our resources with your networks.
(3) Provide us with feedback and let us know how we can better promote your organization by emailing us at oaaction@unc.edu

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