Evaluating the implementation and impact of policy, practice, and environmental changes to prevent childhood obesity in 49 diverse communities.

Auteur(s) :
Brownson RC., Brennan LK., Kemner AL., Donaldson K.
Date :
Mai, 2015
Source(s) :
J Public Health Manag Pract.. #21 Suppl 3 pS121-34
Adresse :
Transtria LLC, St Louis, Missouri (Dr Brennan and Mss Kemner and Donaldson); Prevention Research Center in St Louis, Brown School (Dr Brownson), and Division of Public Health Sciences and Alvin J. Siteman Cancer Center (Dr Brownson), Washington University School of Medicine, Washington University in St Louis, St Louis, Missouri.

Sommaire de l'article

BACKGROUND
The purpose of this article is to assess and understand the intervention reach, dose, and impact of policy, practice, and environmental changes implemented by the 49 Healthy Kids, Healthy Communities (HKHC) community partnerships across the United States and in Puerto Rico. These partnerships planned and implemented healthy eating and active living policy, system, and environmental interventions to support healthier communities for children and families, with special emphasis on reaching children at highest risk for obesity.

METHODS
Using a mixed-methods, participatory evaluation design, investigators analyzed multiple qualitative and quantitative data sources collected during the HKHC initiative from 2009 to 2014. Evaluators used an inductive approach to develop indicators to assess intervention reach, dose, and impact for 6 cross-site strategies, including corner stores, farmers' markets, child care nutrition standards, child care physical activity standards, active transportation, and parks and play spaces.

RESULTS
Across HKHC community partnerships, 4261 policy, practice, or environmental changes occurred in 1536 intervention settings. Several trends emerged from the data related to how different levels of intervention (ie, community-level, setting-level, and within-setting), the size and access to intervention settings, the stage of implementation, and the sociodemographic composition of the intervention settings play important roles in the way policy, practice, and environmental changes "count" toward intervention reach, dose, and impact.

CONCLUSIONS
This exploratory analysis provided a method and typology for increasing understanding in the field related to the reach, dose, and impact of policy, practice, and environmental changes promoting healthy eating and active living in order to reduce childhood overweight and obesity.

Source : Pubmed
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