For the Media
| Road of Life Partners with MetroHealth |
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| Written by Press Release |
| Tuesday, 08 May 2007 00:00 |
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COLUMBUS, OHIO – April 27, 2007- Road of Life has finalized a partnership with The MetroHealth System of Cleveland, Ohio in an effort to provide the Road of Life curriculum with supplemental health career modules to targeted Cleveland Public Schools. This will serve as a platform for extensive programmatic extension in Northeast Ohio. The program will consist of the existing Road of Life Elementary Health Education Curriculum Version 3.0 along with new supplemental modules on Health Career options. The program is targeted at African Americans and Latinos in Cleveland Public Schools in an effort to increase the number of minorities employed in the health field. MetroHealth and Road of Life will be working together to develop the new modules which will be co-branded by both organizations in the Cleveland area. The partnership will place a full-time Road of Life staff member in MetroHealth, Cleveland’s only safety-net public hospital, to assist in the implementation of the program. This partnership is a part of Road of Life’s effort to establish the organization’s Elementary Health Education program in Cleveland with support from the Gries VI generation fund. Road of Life founder Rob Emrich is a Cleveland native. “I am so excited to bring our critical prevention programming to Northeast Ohio. I think both the needs and opportunities of this region present a real challenge, but one we are determined to confront over the long term,” said Rob Emrich. “MetroHealth is committed to improving the community’s health, particularly among vulnerable populations and in neighborhoods suffering from health disparities,” said Eileen Korey, MetroHealth Vice President of Communications. “We believe that Road of Life’s efforts to impact lifestyle and health habits in young children can have positive long-term results for children and their families. We also believe that children educated in health and science may be drawn to work in health care in the future, a growing field of opportunity in our community.” |














