Apollo President, Jonelle Procope |
Speakers included medical experts such as Dr. Ian Smith, Dr.
John Palmer, Dr. Olajide Williams and Dr. Icilma Fergus to help discuss the
dynamics behind several health complications that can arise from poor diet,
little exercise and present everyday solutions for residents.
The free event was held from 12 a.m. to 6 p.m. and featured
discussions on the dangers and facts of obesity, heart disease and major
killers of minorities across the U.S. which are prevalent in the Harlem
Community.
Fergus, President of the National Association of Black
Cardiologists, introduced the Harlem Healthy Hearts program where health
insurance can be discussed, clinical trials can take place at the benefit of participants or individuals with any health risk or concerns can get
screened.
“What we do is we talk to them about being
heart healthy, everything from what you eat to how you feel,”
she said about the program, which is not hospital specific.
Earl "the Pearl" Monroe signs autographs for a Knicks fan |
“Being a Harlem resident, I can relate
to this and even if I wasn’t out here signing autographs, I still
would be here,” said Monroe.
There were also selfie stations using hashtags of
#harlemhealthy, first aid tents, food
demonstrations by Chef Raymond, and health screening areas by Holistic
Care, the William F. Ryan Community Health Center and Harlem United Mobile
Clinics.
“The greener you are is the cleaner you
are inside,” were the words to attendees from one
of the food demonstrations by the Reggae
Sun Juice Bar.
Dr. Ian Smith discusses preventative health measures |
“It’s the first time I
ever had it and the numbers switched and they’re going to help me
find out why,” she said.
Despite the intermingling of rain, crowds gathered for the
festival to attend the information seminars and performances of Faith Evans and
Christian Guardino inside and even joined under the tents to participate in
activity while it poured.
“When you look at ethnic minorities in
the Harlem community - the access to health, the lack of financial wherewithal
- impacts health directly, because they can’t get healthcare
and they cant get insurance,” said Dr. Smith. “
All the things that prevent diseases or treats diseases become a
problem.”
Reggae Sun Juice Bar offers health tips and advice on juicing |
“This is healthy for me, this is
healthy that people learn about health so they can cure themselves and live
longer and be around for their children,”
said resident Shaheed Muhammad.
The event was a partnership between Apollo, Coca-Cola and
EmblemHealth.
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