NHF hosts holistic health fair for retired police officers
KINGSTON, Jamaica— Retired police officers of the Association of Past Members of the Jamaica Constabulary Force (APMJCF) benefitted from a health fair hosted by the National Health Fund (NHF) on Tuesday.
Held at the St John’s Methodist Church Hall in Montego Bay, St James, the fair offered nutrition counselling, a physical activity session and health checks to the Chapter One members of the association, which spans the parishes of Hanover, St James, Trelawny and Westmoreland.
The retired officers specifically benefitted from screening tests for blood pressure, blood sugar, cholesterol, haemoglobin, blood circulation, as well as from checks such as BMI & waist circumference, ECG, the PSA/DRE, mammogram, and pap smear that came at no cost to them.
“The statistics show that there is a high prevalence of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) among retired Jamaicans and that this same demographic group often face financial difficulty in meeting their health needs. The NHF saw this MOU as an opportunity to help this special group of retirees know their numbers. It is the hope that the members of the association will take the necessary follow-up action to preserve their health and well-being,” NHF’s Chief Executive Officer, Everton Anderson said.
The fair was one of four to be held according to a memorandum of understanding signed last December, the NHF said. A second health fair will be held later this year. The two-year MOU also provides for a nutrition workshop, an exercise session, a mental health session and a medication compliance session per quarter.
“When the NHF decided to partner with us we embraced it because after we stop working some of us resort to sitting down and not moving around. This initiative is good in that it brings past members of the JCF to join together and think seriously about our own physical being, mental being and also how important it is to be healthy at this point in our lives. We are realising that inactivity can be detrimental to their own being. There are no words for me to explain how appreciative we are of this initiative,” President of the AMPJCF, Harris Daley said.
The retired cops present at the fair who are living with any of the 17 conditions covered by the fund were encouraged to enrol in the NHFCard Programme.
The 17 chronic conditions are arthritis, asthma, benign prostatic hyperplasia (enlarged prostate), breast cancer, diabetes, epilepsy, glaucoma, high cholesterol, hypertension, ischaemic heart disease, lupus, major depression, prostate cancer, psychosis, rheumatic fever/heart disease, sickle cell disease, and vascular disease.
Other health fairs will be hosted throughout the year for other special groups and the public as NHF marks its 20th anniversary.