Americans are Stocking up on Self-Care at Their Local Library!
A growing trend sees US Libraries acting as health and wellness hubs.
Long-respected for their purpose of lending an enticing selection of books to local people free of charge, as well as functioning as welcoming community hubs, US libraries have extended their central mission. Today, they are offering free health and wellness courses to visitors, irrespective of age, insurance status or language skills, as My Modern Met reports.
Jamie Placht, a member of staff at Kansas City Public Library in Missouri, sees libraries as perfect partners for health services, as they already cater to the demographic that the health services want to help, and many have social work teams in place. As he tells AP: “The overall goal is to first and foremost create healthier communities. You know, we’re an institution of access. Anybody can walk into our libraries and receive services,”he says proudly.
Library wellbeing initiatives are building on public trust
Visits to the local library are part and parcel of many an American child’s upbringing. In 2018, for instance, in recognition of the esteem that libraries inspire in their visitors, the New York Times invited several authors to share a story about their own public library today, or a memory of a library from their past.
So for many commenters, it is hardly surprising that local libraries, public spaces that elicit a feeling of nostalgia as well as community-mindedness in many Americans, should pivot that revered and unique position of trust to explore health literacy and wellbeing, areas that are so central to the lives of their visitors.
Libraries as public health spaces are to many, a natural extension of their role as sources of dependable information in a familiar space that’s beyond formal health care settings.
According to My Modern Met, these burgeoning wellness resources only serve to cement the role of libraries as beacons of free, public and accessible information.
Clearly, these wellness-related services are meeting a need. Web Junction reports that the public have long helped the community lead healthier lives as a core service, and that libraries in the US have a long history of meeting public interest in consumer health information. An IMLS study it quotes, for instance, shows that an estimated 37 percent of library computer users are already using these digital resources, and seeking assistance from library staff on health and wellness issues.
Carolyn McCarthy, a mobile health clinic nurse practitioner, goes further. She tells My Modern Met that “What we do is a Band-Aid on a broken (health care) system.”
This is the Health & Wellness page of the Oak Park public library in Illinois, for example. As well as informative articles on crucial topics like ways to take charge of your health, kickstarting healthy habits in the New Year, and using the library to beat the heat, the library employs its own Health and Wellness Services Specialist to help clients navigate the resources. Their remit also takes in developing health programing, and nurturing community partnerships based on healthy living.
A broad range of wellness classes and checks are offered for free!
Significantly, the vast majority of these health and wellbeing offerings in American public libraries, situated everywhere from small rural towns, to large urban hubs, are free of charge for participants.
And the range of classes and checks is impressive. These include fitness classes, conversations about loneliness, blood pressure monitors that can be checked out like books, or used on-site, food pantries filled with boxes of surplus food from local farmers, and cooking classes.
Mental health support alone, the American Libraries Magazine observes, has become more innovative and diverse. It already takes in quiet rooms for rest and relaxation, robotic pets to help purr away patrons’ anxieties, and grief groups.
The AP article, for instance, discusses how, in the main hallway of the Milwaukee Public Library’s large downtown branch, a caring group from the Aurora Health Care Mobile Medical Clinic team is on hand with a blood pressure cuff and mental health questionnaire. Medics gently call out to library patrons who pause curiously, inviting them to ask questions about their health. Many are availing of this help, and drilling down to ask about the impact of prescribed medicines, for instance.
Another library endeavor in Milwaukee teaches kids about healthy nutrition habits in a weekly after-school program. This has been led by a chef, Sharrie Agee, since 2022. Her creative approach includes teaching these youngsters how to make healthier snacks from different continents, including rice and beans, and pizza.
In the small Texas town of Jarrell, which has no local public health office, the local library connects patrons to mental health support. Ever attentive to the needs of its clients, it is also the setting for brave conversations. When a senior card game chat turned to a discussion of the best local crematorium facilities, for instance, the library brought in local end-of-life planning experts, library director, Susan Gregurek shares with AP. “This is mental health, but it’s obviously larger than mental health,” she adds.
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