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Arthritis
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Contact Information:

National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion

Division of Adult and Community Health
Health Care and Aging Studies Branch

Arthritis Program
Mailstop K-51
4770 Buford Highway NE
Atlanta, GA 30341-3724
Phone: 770.488.5464
Fax: 770.488.5964
Email Us



 


About Us


On this page:

bullet Our Work
bullet Program Staff
bullet Partnerships


Our vision — a world where people with arthritis live the fullest life possible, with the ability to pursue valued life activities with minimal pain.

Our mission — to improve the quality of life of people affected by arthritis.

CDC and its partners are working to implement recommendations in the PDF logoNational Arthritis Action Plan: A Public Health Strategy* (PDF-394K). This landmark public health plan was developed by CDC, the Arthritis Foundation, the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials, and more than 90 other organizations. It recommends a variety of activities to reduce pain, disability, and improve the quality of life of persons affected by arthritis.

Our Goals:

Short-Term Goals

  • Improve and increase self-management attitudes and behaviors among persons with arthritis.
  • Increase early diagnosis and appropriate pain management.

Long-Term Goals

  • Decrease pain and disability among persons with arthritis.
  • Improve physical, psychosocial, and work function among persons with arthritis.

The first-ever National Objectives for Arthritis (PDF–1.3Mb) PDF logoare available in the Healthy People 2010 report. More information is available on Healthy People 2010.

Our Work

The Arthritis Program is working to

  • Measure the burden of arthritis. At the national level, CDC uses surveys of the National Center for Health Statistics to define the burden of arthritis, monitor trends, and assess how arthritis affects quality of life. At the state level, CDC and states (all 50, District of Columbia, and the 3 territories) use the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System to obtain arthritis burden data.
     
  • Strengthen the science base. CDC conducts or supports research to define the impact of arthritis in the United States. We also support research to both develop and evaluate interventions to help people with arthritis improve their quality of life.
     
  • Increase Awareness. CDC, working with the Arthritis Foundation, states, and other partners is supporting two health communications campaigns promoting physical activity among people with arthritis: Physical Activity. The Arthritis Pain Reliever for English speaking audiences, and Buenos Días, Artritis for Hispanic audiences.
     
  • Build State Arthritis Programs. State Health Departments, with CDC support, are working to strengthen partnerships, increase public awareness, and expand the reach of interventions that have been proven to improve the quality of life of people with arthritis.

Arthritis Program Staff

The Arthritis Program has a staff with expertise in behavioral science, epidemiology, health communication, health education, and project management. Currently, there are 14 full-time staff devoting their efforts to the Arthritis Program at the CDC. Program staff are involved in providing technical assistance for research and programmatic efforts, collaborating with state programs, analyzing data, and producing scientific reports.

Partnerships

Addressing the burden of arthritis requires coordinated and collaborative efforts among many organizations, including governmental and public health agencies, private organizations such as the Arthritis Foundation and the Lupus Foundation of America, aging agencies, health systems, and others. These types of alliances help to assure the needed comprehensive approach to arthritis.

Find out more about our arthritis program partners.

 

PDF logoSome documents on this page are available in Portable Document Format (PDF). Learn more about viewing and printing PDF documents with Acrobat Reader.

* Links to non-Federal organizations are provided solely as a service to our users. Links do not constitute an endorsement of any organization by CDC or the Federal Government, and none should be inferred. The CDC is not responsible for the content of the individual organization Web pages found at this link.

Page last reviewed: October 22, 2008
Page last modified: October 22, 2008
Content Source: Division of Adult and Community Health, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion





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