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Apps for Healthy Kids

Game jams to be held next weekend in six US cities.

For Immediate Release

MOUNT ROYAL, NJ - May 11, 2010 - Today the International Game Developers Association (IGDA), in partnership with the U.S. Department of Agriculture, announced it is organizing game jams in at least six major U.S. cities on the weekend of May 21st to harness the creative and technical capabilities of video game developers in support of the Apps for Healthy Kids competition ( www.appsforhealthykids.com). Announced by First Lady Michelle Obama on March 10, 2010, as part of her Let's Move! campaign to end childhood obesity, the Apps for Healthy Kids competition challenges software developers, game designers, students, and other innovators to develop innovative, fun, and engaging tools and games that help kids and their parents to eat better and be more physically active. Prizes totaling $60,000 will be awarded to the entries that are voted the best by a panel of expert judges.

The game jams will draw game developers, graphic artists, and local youth together to brainstorm ideas and produce video game prototypes from scratch in just 48 hours. The prototypes will be displayed at the sixth annual Games for Health Conference, to be held May 26-27, 2010 in Boston, further refined, and submitted to the Apps for Healthy Kids competition before the June 30th deadline.

"This unique partnership provides a fun way for our members to focus their creative energies towards the goal of the Apps for Healthy Kids competition. Game jams, like our very successful yearly Global Game Jam, are a great way to do that. We're looking forward toward generating some amazing entries for the contest." said IGDA Board Chair Gordon Bellamy.

The game jams, hosted by the IGDA and the U.S. Department of Agriculture, are a joint initiative of the Games for Health Project and Health Games Research. The Games for Health Project ( www.gamesforhealth.org) works to build the overall field of games for health through a variety of activities including the annual Games for Health Conference, which brings together game developers, technology experts, health professionals, researchers, policy-makers and investors. The Health Games Research national program ( www.healthgamesresearch.org), headquartered at the University of California, Santa Barbara, provides resources and scientific leadership to the field and supports 21 research projects across the U.S., all focusing on the research and design of effective health games aimed at improving players' physical activity and or their prevention and self-care behaviors. Both Games for Health and Health Games Research are supported the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation's Pioneer Portfolio, which seeks out innovative ideas that may lead to significant breakthroughs in the future of health and health care.

"This partnership brings together the Federal Government, the largest association of game developers, and two leading organizations exploring how video games and game technologies can improve health and health care," said Ben Sawyer, co-founder of the Games for Health Project and co-organizer of the game jam weekend. "Together we want to respond to the call to the creative development community issued by the USDA and the White House to play a part in battling the epidemic of childhood obesity. The best games for health come from a dynamic mix of expertise in game development, health and health care, research, and the subject at hand. The game jams will bring these forces together at large-scale."

"We applaud the USDA and the White House for seeing the potential power of digital games to improve health," said Debra Lieberman, Ph.D., director of Health Games Research and communication researcher at the University of California, Santa Barbara. "Well designed games can do more than entertain. Previous research and the groundbreaking studies we're supporting are demonstrating how health games can help build the health-related knowledge, attitudes, skills and social relationships that are known to improve players' health behaviors and outcomes."

Game Jam Challenge Details

All jams take place from May 21-23 (Friday - Sunday). Current plans call for the Game Jam Challenge to include Boston, Albany, San Francisco, Atlanta, Orlando, Pittsburgh, Seattle, and Fairfax. As IGDA chapters find locations and set up participation structures, details will be posted online at: www.healthgameschallenge.org and www.appsforhealthykids.com. Games must incorporate USDA nutrition data, aim to motivate kids to eat better and be more physically active, and otherwise comply with the full contest rules, available at www.appsforhealthykids.com. All sites are encouraged to involve local youth, health experts and nutrition experts in their plans when possible. Sites are asked to promote and provide healthy foods and snacks for all participants. Screenshots and, where possible, game demos as developed will be made available for public access though thewww.healthgameschallenge.org site. While the Apps for Healthy Kids competition is only open to U.S. residents, the IGDA still welcomes international participants for the fun of it.

About the IGDA

The International Game Developers Association is the largest non-profit membership organization serving individuals that create video games. The IGDA is committed to advancing the careers and enhancing the lives of game developers by connecting members with their peers, promoting professional development, and advocating on issues that affect the developer community. For more information, please visit: www.igda.org.

About the Games for Health Project

Games for Health, the leading professional community in the field of health games, brings together the best minds in game development and health care to advance game technologies that improve health and the delivery of health care. Games for Health is funded primarily by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation's Pioneer Portfolio. For more information, please visit: www.gamesforhealth.org.

About Health Games Research

The Health Games Research national program conducts and supports research to advance the quality and effectiveness of digital games designed to improve players' health. The program is located at the University of California, Santa Barbara, one of the nation's top-ranked public universities. For more information about the national program and about research in the growing health games field, and to search the Health Games Research online database, visitwww.healthgamesresearch.org.

About the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the Pioneer Portfolio

The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation focuses on the pressing health and health care issues facing our country. As the nation's largest philanthropy devoted exclusively to improving the health and health care of all Americans, the Foundation works with a diverse group of organizations and individuals to identify solutions and achieve comprehensive, meaningful and timely change. The Foundation's Pioneer Portfolio supports innovative ideas and projects that may lead to important breakthroughs in health and health care. Projects in the Pioneer Portfolio are future-oriented and look beyond conventional thinking to explore solutions at the cutting edge of health and health care. When it comes to helping Americans lead healthier lives and get the care they need, the Foundation expects to make a difference in your lifetime. For more information, visit www.rwjf.org/pioneer.

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