Cooking up healthy eating support for families

Dozens of families in Newcastle’s West End are set to get support with healthy eating thanks to our new initiative with funding from Newcastle Building Society.  We are using a £2,980 Society grant to organise a series of eight cookery demonstrations and workshops for people from the local community to help inspire them with ideas and techniques for how they can eat more healthily on a low budget.  The sessions will mostly take place at Healthworks’ premises in Benwell and Lemington, although some will be delivered in community locations elsewhere in the city.

Participants will also get the chance to earn recognised Level Two food hygiene accreditations through their involvement with the project, which could help them find employment in the future.

The funding has been provided through the Newcastle Building Society Community Fund at the Community Foundation, which offers grants to charities and community groups located in or around the communities served by the Society’s branch network.

As well as running group activities like the healthy eating workshops, we also provide bespoke one-to-one support tailored to individuals’ different lifestyle and health needs, including diabetes, blood pressure and weight management, and work with a number of schools across the city to reach younger residents.

Julie Stephens, Senior Manager for Health Promotion says: “Our aim is to maximise the health and well-being benefits and outcomes that we can deliver to local families, and equipping them with greater knowledge and skills around diet and healthy eating is absolutely central to this work.

“The sessions have been designed to offering practical inspiration and ideas for incorporating healthy eating into everyday meal planning and preparation, while also promoting the health and lifestyle benefits that go along with it.

“Offering a recognised qualification as part of the project provides an extra incentive for people to get involved and ties in with the holistic approach that we look to take towards supporting local families.

“There’s usually a cost attached to providing the accreditation element of this project, so being able to use the Society’s funding to offer both this and the wider course free of charge is a real boost to both our work and the well-being of the many families that are taking part.”

Samantha Martlew, manager at Newcastle Building Society’s West Denton branch, adds: “Healthworks is doing fantastic work in improving the health, well-being and prospects of people living across our home city and it’s great for us to be supporting a project that will deliver so many long-term benefits.”