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More than $38,000 to boost Wide Bay Burnett children’s health and wellbeing

Health and Wellbeing Queensland
  • More than $38,000 in grant funding has been awarded to community-led projects in the Wide Bay Burnett region
  • The GenQ Health and Wellbeing Queensland Grants Program aims to support the health and wellbeing of infants, children and young people
  • Grants were awarded to initiatives that promote physical activity, nutrition, health literacy, wellbeing and/or health equity

Local communities across Queensland are being empowered to implement initiatives that improve the health and wellbeing of infants, children and young people through new grant funding.

, the state’s prevention agency, has awarded 25 community projects a total of nearly $400,000 in funding through its inaugural GenQ Health and Wellbeing Community grants scheme.

Grants were awarded to initiatives that promote physical activity, nutrition, health literacy, wellbeing and/or health equity in local communities.

That funding includes $38,591 delivered to two community projects in the Wide Bay Burnett region that successfully applied to the scheme.

  • Central Queensland University, $19,991 – To implement a beach-based play program ‘U-BEACH’ in the Bundaberg region for children and youth with disability, and to provide resources to allow continued participation in health-promoting physical, community and social activities.
  • Queensland Police-Citizens Youth Welfare Association, $18,600 – To deliver the PCYC Youth Management Teams and After School Sports programs in the South Burnett community, to improve opportunities and encourage access to engaging in physical activity programs.

Health and Wellbeing Queensland Chief Executive Officer Dr Robyn Littlewood said creating a generational shift was key to helping Queensland’s children and young people live healthier more active lives.

‘It’s wonderful this Children’s Week to acknowledge the communities across our state who are driving to improve the health and wellbeing of Queensland’s more than 1.2 million children and young people,’ she said.

‘New research shows that a child born in the decade from 2023 may have a shorter life expectancy than their parents – we need to reverse this trend.

‘These Community Grants are just one of the steps we’re taking to deliver our GenQ vision so that children born today experience better health outcomes than the generations of Queenslanders before them.

‘These grants will help make healthy happen faster for our state by driving innovation across key areas that have a huge impact on our health and wellbeing, and most importantly by supporting communities bring the ideas to life that will be most beneficial – because they know their own communities better than anyone.’

/Public Release.