
Dedicated to the Memory of Toni Yancey
Dr. Antronette (Toni) Yancey, a professor at the UCLA Fielding School of
Public Health who devoted her career to improving the health of vulnerable
populations and eliminating health disparities, died April 23 following a
battle with lung cancer. She was 55.
Yancey, a passionate advocate of healthy living through physical fitness, was
widely known for creating "
Instant
Recess," a unique program dedicated to "making America healthier 10
minutes at a time." Her idea of incorporating brief bouts of physical activity
into people's daily routine, whether at school, work or worship, earned her
numerous awards, including the 2012 Pioneering Innovation Award from the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Yancey's 2010 book, "
Instant
Recess: Building a Fit Nation 10 Minutes at a Time," zeroed in on the
state of American fitness and health — persistently sedentary, plagued by
obesity — and issued a call to action that reached across economic, racial and
educational lines. Her radically new approach, which was respectful of
diversity and sensitive to the cultures of those who were most at risk, made
physical activity the default behavior of choice. The "Instant Recess" program
continues to expand in workplaces, schools, sports stadiums, houses of worship
and other places where people gather. Today, more than 37 cities have adopted
policies encouraging exercise breaks during meetings that last more than an
hour.
"Dr. Yancey was an extraordinary life force who made an impact on everyone she
knew — from those who only met her once to those who considered her a lifelong
friend," said Dr. Jody Heymann, dean of the UCLA Fielding School of Public
Health. "She has left a tremendous mark on the field of public health as a
leader committed to, and exceptionally effective at, translating research into
successful programs and policy, as a passionate teacher and mentor, as an
acclaimed scholar and as a strong and crucial voice addressing inequities in
health."
Yancey co-founded the Fielding School's
UCLA
Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Equity, through which she championed
the cause of social justice. She was tireless in her commitment to ensure that
research findings would transform lives. She made change happen in countless
ways, from advocating for policy change and cajoling employers to allow their
staffs to engage in "Instant Recess" on paid time, to serving as a role model
for countless minority students and pounding the pavement in the community to
connect on a personal level with the people she served.
For most of her professional career, Yancey championed strategies to involve
vulnerable populations in physical activity. As director of public health for
the city of Richmond, Va., she created and conducted the "
Rock!
Richmond" campaign to get every able-bodied adult in the city engaged in
more physical activity. As director of chronic disease prevention and health
promotion for Los Angeles County, she inaugurated "L.A. Lift Off," a 10-minute
exercise break designed to involve mostly overweight, sedentary workers in
low-impact dance moves at work. The success of this endeavor evolved into
"Instant Recess."
Yancey's commitment to working in the community garnered her numerous awards,
including a Lifetime Achievement Award from the President's Council on
Fitness, Sports and Nutrition; a Champions of Health Professions Diversity
Award from The California Wellness Foundation; a Lifetime Achievement Award
from the Association of Black Women Physicians; an Award for Excellence from
the American Public Health Association; the California State Assembly 47th
District's Woman of the Year honor; a Health Education Achievement and
Leadership Award from the Henry Ford Health System; a WNBA Los Angeles Sparks
Lisa Leslie Inspiring Women Award; a Joint Health Promotion Award from the
California Public Health Association; and a Women Who Dared Award from the
California Black Women's Health Project, among others. In 2000, she was
honored as one of the top 50 scholarship recipients in the 50-year history of
the National Medical Fellowships.
Born Nov. 1, 1957, in Kansas City, Kan., Yancey completed her undergraduate
studies in biochemistry and molecular biology at Northwestern University and
earned a medical degree at Duke University. She completed her residency in
preventive medicine at UCLA, where she also earned a master's of public health
degree. Yancey went on to serve five years in public health practice, first as
director of public health for Richmond, Va., then as Los Angeles County's
director of chronic disease prevention and health promotion. She then returned
to academia full time, where she continued her work in teaching and research
until the end of her life.
Yancey was a true renaissance woman. In addition to being a physician and
professor at UCLA, she was a poet and author, a former fashion model and, at
6'2", a Division 1 basketball player during her undergraduate years at
Northwestern. She brought a self-deprecating sense of humor to her life story,
telling
UCLA Magazine in 2006 that the
nicest compliment she ever received was that she could "talk a hungry dog off
a meat wagon."
Yancey always lamented that she was never able to dunk a basketball. In the
same interview with UCLA Magazine, she also expressed how happy she was at
UCLA, saying that "being a professor at UCLA allows me to do most everything I
love."
Yancey is survived by her partner of 11 years, Darlene Edgley, their daughter
Kanitra and son-in-law Oscar, and her granddaughter Anais, all of Los Angeles,
and by her brother, sister-in-law and niece, who live in Texas.
In lieu of flowers, her family requests that donations be sent to the Yancey
Edgley Scholarship Fund. Checks can be mailed to Santa Monica College, Black
Collegians, 1900 Pico Blvd., Santa Monica, Calif. 90405.
UCLA
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Instant Recess
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