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WHY 2019 WHY 2020 MAKES US - ASPHN · MAKES US WHY 2019 MADE US 2 0 1 9 Looking Back Moving Forward...
Transcript of WHY 2019 WHY 2020 MAKES US - ASPHN · MAKES US WHY 2019 MADE US 2 0 1 9 Looking Back Moving Forward...
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion
DIVISION OF NUTRITION, PHYSICAL ACTIVITY, AND OBESITY (DNPAO) ANNUAL UPDATE
WHY 2020MAKES US
WHY 2019MADE US
2
0
1
9
Looking Back Moving Forward
TODAY’S DISCUSSION WILL FOCUS ON –
▪ Overview of DNPAO Priorities
▪ Highlights from Division Branch
Chiefs
▪ Future Direction of DNPAO
▪ Improved dietary quality to support
healthy child development and
improved nutrition for all ages
▪ People of all ages and abilities meeting
physical activity guidelines
DNPAO MAIN OBJECTIVES
NATIONAL CENTER FOR CHRONIC DISEASE PREVENTION AND
HEALTH PROMOTION
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THE DIVISION OF NUTRITION, PHYSICAL ACTIVITY, AND OBESITY
(DNPAO)Ruth Petersen,
DirectorAnn O’Connor,
Deputy Director
Janet Fulton
Branch ChiefCAPT Heidi Blanck,
Branch Chief
Rafael (Rafa) Flores-Ayala,
Branch Chief
Terry O’Toole,
Branch Chief
Janelle Gunn, Associate
Director for Policy
Deborah Galuska, Associate
Director for Science
Nutrition BranchObesity Prevention &
Control Branch
Program Development &
Evaluation Branch
Physical Activity &
Health Branch
Office of the Associate
Director for ScienceOffice of Policy, Partnerships,
& Communications
DNPAO STRATEGIC PRIORITIES
▪ Breastfeeding
▪ Maternal, Infant & Toddler Nutrition
▪ Vitamins & Minerals
Adults & Older
Adults Maintaining
a Healthy Lifestyle
Reaching All Americans Across the Lifespan by Supporting
Children & Youth
Growing Up Strong
& Healthy
A Healthy Start
for Infants
▪ Good Nutrition & Healthy Food Environments
▪ Physical Activity & Access to Environments
Designed for Physical Activity
▪ Healthy Weight Management & Obesity
Prevention 6
What is a non-add? A non-add is not included in the budget line total.
A non-add indicates funds that are set aside for a specific purpose or
program.
DNPAO BUDGET HISTORY – FY 2016 – FY 2019DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS
Budget Activity/Description FY 2016 FY 2017 FY 2018 FY 2019
Nutrition, PA, High Obesity
Counties and Obesity
Non-adds:
High Obesity Counties
Farm to School
$49,895
$10,000
$49,803
$10,000
$54,920
$15,000
$56,920
$15,000
$2,000
REACHREACH joined DNPAO in 2017. Italicized amounts are not added to DNPAO total.
$50,950 $34,950* $34,950* $34,950*
National Early Childcare
Collaborative$4,000 $4,000 $4,000 $4,000
Hospitals Promoting BF $8,000 $8,000 $8,000 $8,000
Total $61,895 $96,753 $101,870 $103,870
Childhood Obesity Research
Demonstration (CORD)**$5,000 $5,000 $5,000 $5,000
Notes:
*Funding for tribal initiatives (non-add) not shown.
** CORD was appropriated at $25M in 2011; $10M in 2016; and $30M in 2018.
Source: FY 2016-2019 Appropriations
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HIGHLIGHTS FROM DIVISION BRANCH CHIEFS
Terry O’Toole, Branch Chief
NUTRITION
HIGHLIGHTS
Terry O’Toole, Branch ChiefPHYSICAL ACTIVITY
HIGHLIGHTS
Terry O’Toole, Branch ChiefOBESITY
HIGHLIGHTS
Terry O’Toole, Branch ChiefPROGRAM
HIGHLIGHTS
PROGRAM DEVELOPMENT AND
EVALUATIONBRANCH
Terry O’Toole,
Branch Chief
PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS
Reaching All Americans Across the Lifespan
FIVE ACTION STEPS WE CAN TAKE TO REDUCE CHRONIC DISEASE THROUGH IMPROVED PHYSICAL ACTIVITY & NUTRITION
1. Make physical activity
safe and accessible for allSupport active transportation and land use
policies to make more activity-friendly routes
to everyday destinations.
Make healthy food choices
available everywhereImprove healthy food options through
procurement to include healthy food service
guidelines in state agencies and community
settings where food is offered, served, and
sold.
2.
Make breastfeeding easier
to start and sustain
3.
Help hospitals use evidence-based
maternity care practices to support new
mothers to start breastfeeding.
Strengthen state level obesity
prevention standards in early
care and education centers (ECE)
4.
Improve standards that help prevent childhood
obesity (breastfeeding, healthy eating, physical
activity, and limit screen time) within their existing
ECE systems.
Spread and scale pediatric
weight management programs
5.
Work with state Medicaid programs to ensure
pediatric weight management interventions are
easy to access for families with low income.
DNPAO – STRATEGIES ACROSS SPAN, REACH, HOP
• Implement interventions to support
breastfeeding (47)
• Implement healthy nutrition standards in
key institutions –ECE (32)
• Make improvements to state and local ECE
programs/systems (33)
• Implement food service guidelines in
worksites and community settings to
increase availability of healthy foods (58)
• Work with food vendors, distributors and
producers to enhance healthier food
procurement and sales (53)
• Accelerate, adopt, or expand FTS (14)
Nutrition (62) Physical Activity (58)Community/
Clinical Linkages (29)
• Collaborate with partners to connect
activity-friendly routes to everyday
destinations to increase physical activity
(58)
• Implement and integrate physical activity
standards into statewide early care and
education (ECE) systems (28)
• Promote the use of appropriate and locally
available programs for individuals in the
priority population(s)
• Expand the use of health professionals to
increase referral of individuals in the
priority population(s) to appropriate and
locally available health and preventive care
programs
Promote Tobacco-Free Living
(REACH) (10)
• Implement tobacco free policies within
workplaces and multi-unit housing and
address healthier retail options
Milestones*all strategies
Intermediate
Performance
Measures*all strategies
Long Term Outcome
Evaluation*1 strategy –SPAN/REACH
*2 strategies – HOP
Demonstrated
progressSetting &
population reach
Health behavior
changes
MEASURING IMPACT – SPAN, HOP, AND REACH
GETTING SET UP FOR SUCCESS!
62 Recipients across SPAN, REACH, HOP
• Majority new to DNPAO work in some way
• Federal funding, amount of funding, strategies (R2D)
Phase 1
• 101s (internal, external)
• Monthly recipient calls
Phase 2
• DNPAO National Training
Phase 3
• Site visits
• Networking calls, monthly recipient calls
Description Score
Content was relevant to success on the job 4.23
Content aligned with the priorities and goals for
implementing their programs
4.28
Training was a worthwhile investment for CDC 4.39
Training is critical to the work they perform 4.30
NEEDS WE’RE SEEING
ASSETS WE’RE SEEING
DNPAO AMBASSADOR PROGRAM
▪ Ensure appropriate DNPAO resources are
available and accessible to Ambassadors
(national training meeting, webinars,
networking calls)
▪ Effectively coordinate with ambassador
program partners – NACDD and ASPHN so
that ambassadors have expanded
opportunities for supporting their NPAO work
▪ Active participation in NACDD state
engagement model meetings with select
ambassador states
▪ 31 states are actively participating
10,098 ECE facilities, 2,343 worksites, and 271 community settings adopted FSGs or nutrition
standards, and 2.7 million more people have access to interventions to improve nutrition
2,274 communities developed a pedestrian or master transportation plan
447 birthing facilities began using recommended breastfeeding practices
141 birthing facilities were designated as Baby-Friendly
2,623 community sites provided professional and peer support for breastfeeding
1,909 employers provided space and time for nursing mothers to express breastmilk
Over 322,000 people have access to interventions to reduce tobacco use and exposure
IMPACT (2013-2018)
Success stories
Peer-reviewed publications
Evaluation reports
Infographics
Earned media
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Communicating Your Success! Where do you see yourself?
▪ Active People, Healthy Nation℠ in Year 2 workplan
▪ Use the design element
▪ We can help!
CDC IS COUNTING ON YOU!
Terry O’Toole, PhD, MDiv
PHYSICAL ACTIVITY AND HEALTH BRANCH
Janet Fulton
Branch Chief
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THE PROBLEM: TOO FEW AMERICANS GET THE RECOMMENDED AMOUNT OF PHYSICAL ACTIVITY
About 31 million adults aged 50 or older are inactive,
meaning they get no physical activity beyond that of daily living
Only 1 in 5 adults and high school students
fully meet physical activity
guidelines for aerobic and
muscle-strengthening activities
Only 40% of school-aged youth who live a
mile or less from school report
that they usually walk to school
OUR VISION: SAFE AND PLENTIFUL OPPORTUNITIES FOR PHYSICAL ACTIVITY FOR EVERYONE
Walking
Bicycling
Safe Routes to Schools/
Walking School Bus
Early Care and Education
(Physical Activity
Standards)
Preschool-aged
Children (2-5 years)
Children and Adolescents (6-17 years)
Worksite Wellness Supports
(stairwell prompts,
gym facilities, paid gym
memberships, paid time for
physical activity)
Fitwel (PA criteria)
Adults Older Adults
Wheeling
Safe Streets for Seniors
Parks
Promoting Healthy Built Environments Shared-Use Agreements Land-Use and
Environmental Design Polices and Interventions
Community-Wide
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WHAT WORKS?
STRATEGIES TO INCREASE PHYSICAL ACTIVITY
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BUILT ENVIRONMENT APPROACHES U.S. COMMUNITY PREVENTIVE SERVICES TASK FORCE
Combine interventions from two major categories
Pedestrian or Bicycle
Transportation Systems▪ Pedestrian infrastructure
▪ Bicycle infrastructure
▪ Public transit infrastructure
and access
▪ Street design and connectivity
Land Use and
Environmental Design ▪ Proximity to destinations
▪ Mixed land use
▪ Residential density
▪ Parks and recreational facilities
Guide to Community Preventive Services. Physical Activity: Built Environment Approaches Combining Transportation System Interventions with Land Use and Environmental
Design. https://www.thecommunityguide.org/findings/physical-activity-built-environment-approaches. Page last updated: May 01, 2017. Page accessed: May 4, 2017
Activity-Friendly Routes
to
Everyday Destinations25
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ACTIVITY-FRIENDLY ROUTES TO EVERYDAY DESTINATIONS: AN ILLUSTRATION
2006: 10 state-level policies and 36 unique local or regional policies
2017: 33 state-level policies and 1260 unique local or regional policies
COMPLETE STREETS POLICIES
POLICY, SYSTEM, AND ENVIRONMENTAL SUPPORTS FOR PHYSICAL ACTIVITY
0
20
40
60
80
100
Shared-Use
Agreement
Complete
Streets Policy
Master Land Use Transportation Bicycle Parks
1,000-2,500 2,500-49,999 ≥50,000
Types of Plan Present
10-year
Surveillance
Plan
Population Size:
WALKABILITY ACTION INSTITUTE
Teams have reported 663walkability related outcomes
Reaching a reported
40,226,033 people
Leveraging a collective total
of $170,366,041
Representing a project
ROI of 126:1
5th annual Walkability Action Institute: Broward County, FL; Clackamas County, OR; Daytona, FL; Ft Collins, CO; Franklin and Grand Isle Counties, VT; Lane
County, OR; Marshall County, IN; Maui, HI; Montgomery County, PA; Spokane, WA
ACTIVE COMMUNITIES TOOL (ACT)
Activity-Friendly
Routes
Module 1: Street Design
and Connectivity
Module 2: Infrastructure for
Pedestrians and
Bicyclists
Module 3: Public
Transportation
Everyday
Destinations
Module 4: Land Use
Planning
Module 5: Parks and
Recreational
Facilities
Module 6: Schools
Broad, General Questions
A series of detailed
questions
= Opportunity
KEY PHYSICAL ACTIVITY REPORTS
Healthy People
2030
November, 2018 September, 2019
Healthy People 2030 Objectives Adults Youth
No leisure time physical activity √
Minimum aerobic activity guideline √ √
High aerobic activity guideline √
Muscle-strengthening guideline √ √
Aerobic and muscle-strengthening
guidelines
√ √
Walk or bike for transportation √ √
Screen time < 1 hr/day (2 to 5 years) √
Sports participation √
INCREASED PHYSICAL ACTIVITY CAN IMPROVE HEALTH, QUALITY OF LIFE,AND REDUCE HEALTHCARE COSTS
A national initiative led by CDC to help
27 million Americans become more physically active by 2027
27 million
by 2027
#ActivePeople
NUTRITION BRANCH HIGHLIGHTS
Rafael (Rafa) Flores-Ayala,
Branch Chief
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OUR VISION: OPTIMAL NUTRITION ACROSS THE LIFESPAN
Breastfeeding
Maternal
Nutrition
Early Child
Nutrition
DNPAO works to reduce micronutrient deficiencies and
establish healthier food environments
Early Care and
Education
Farm to Education
Food Service Guidelines
Healthy Food Systems
Food Security
NUTRITION BRANCH HIGHLIGHTS 2019
▪ Completed the EMPower Training
Initiative
▪ Updated Infant and Toddler nutrition
resources
▪ Completed the Maternity Practices in
Infant Nutrition and Care (mPINC)
Survey 2018
▪ Analyzed and disseminated National
Immunization Survey (NIS)
breastfeeding rates
▪ Published and contributed to
publications in infant and young child
nutrition and surveillance
Maternal, Infant &
Toddler Nutrition Vitamin & Mineral
Malnutrition
▪ Led Public Health Grand Rounds – The Thousand Day Window of Opportunity
▪ Strengthened national nutrition
surveillance systems in 7 countries and
the USA
▪ Conducted program process and impact
evaluations in 5 countries
▪ Completed initial phases of body
imaging technology evaluation
▪ Published and contributed to
publications in vitamin and mineral
nutrition and surveillance
More Babies are Starting out Breastfeeding Overall
2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Percentage Of U.S. Children Who Were Breastfed, By Birth Year
Ever Breastfed
79% in
2011
84%
in
2016!
Great News: Black Women are Making Strides
in Breastfeeding!
2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
PERCENTAGE OF U.S. NON-HISPANIC BLACK CHILDREN
WHO WERE BREASTFED, BY BIRTH YEAR
12 percentage point increase
in only 5 years!
62% in
2011
74%
in
2016!
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
% o
f b
irth
s
28% of births in 2019 (>1M babies)
2011-14
230K births
2014-17
157K births
2017-19
2018 mPINC survey (fielded Nov
2018 – July 2019)
▪ ~2000 hospitals responded (~70%)
▪ Currently developing hospital-specific
reports and state reports
2020 and 2022 mPINC contracts
awarded and in-progress
MPINC 2.0
16%12%
28%
21%
5%
13%
28%
0%
20%
40%
Total Non-Hispanic
White
Non-Hispanic
Black
Hispanic First
Trimester
Second
Trimester
Third
Trimester
PROBLEM: IRON DEFICIENCY IS HIGHEST LATE IN PREGNANCY
Gupta PM, Hamner HC, Suchdev PS, et al. Am J Clin Nutr. 2017 Dec;106(Suppl 6):1640S–1646S
Prevalence of Iron Deficiency among U.S. Pregnant Women
National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 1999–2010
By Race and Ethnicity By Trimester
3 in 4 pregnant or lactating
women took a dietary supplement
Of these, less than 1 in 3 took a
supplement containing iodine
LESS THAN 1 IN 5 U.S. WOMEN TAKE A PRENATAL VITAMIN CONTAINING IODINE DURING PREGNANCY
Perrine CG, Herrick KA, Gupta PM, Caldwell KL. Thyroid. 2019 Jan;29(1):153-154.
Gupta PM, Gahche JJ, Herrick KA, Ershow AG, Potischman N, Perrine CG. Nutrients. 2018 Mar 29;10(4). pii: E422.
Iodine status of pregnant women
141 153 1350
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
1988-1994 2001-2006 2007-2014
Insufficient
Adequate
Above requirements
Med
ian
Uri
nary
Io
din
e
Co
nce
ntr
ati
on
(U
IC)
µg
/L
2011-2014
Pregnancy <1 yr 1-5 yr 6-11 yr 12+ yr
National State National State National State National State National State
Iron Limited, 2010 -- -- -- Limited, 2010 -- -- -- Yes, 2010 --
Anemia Limited, 2016 ** -- ** Yes, 2016 ** Yes, 2016 -- Yes, 2016 --
Iodine Limited, 2016 -- -- -- 3-5 y, 2016 -- Yes, 2016 -- Yes, 2016 --
**State-based estimates among WIC participants prior to 2012 obtained via PNSS and PedNSS.
Limited data during first 1,000 days Limited data at state level Limitations within NHANES biomarkers
DATA GAPS
INFANT FEEDING PRACTICES STUDY III
This study will –
Provide data on a sample of US infants and toddlers
Assess feeding practices as they relate to the U.S. Dietary Guidelines for Americans 2020–2025 recommendations
Anticipate recruitment will begin in late 2021 or early 2022
Support from USDA, FDA, NIH, NCCDPHP/OD and DOH
U.S. DIETARY GUIDELINES FOR AMERICANS 2020 - 2025
NEW: Inclusion of pregnant women and children
<2y for the first time
Supporting Birth to 24 months Subcommittee
Anticipated release – December 2020
What it means for us
How to message and align efforts
How to engage federal and non-federal partners
What it is going to do and not do (remaining gaps)
OBESITY PREVENTION AND CONTROL BRANCH
CAPT Heidi Blanck,
Branch Chief
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OUR VISION: OPTIMAL NUTRITION ACROSS THE LIFESPAN
Breastfeeding
Maternal
Nutrition
Early Child
Nutrition
DNPAO works to reduce micronutrient deficiencies and
establish healthier food environments
Early Care and
Education
Farm to Education
Food Service Guidelines
Healthy Food Systems
Food Security
NUTRITION STANDARDS/FOOD SERVICE GUIDELINES ACROSS THE LIFE COURSE (“FULL DOSE”) - HEALTHY CHOICES IN THE PLACES WHERE
AMERICANS LEARN, WORK, PRAY, AND PLAY
Early Care and Education(CACFP, State Licensing/
Regs/QRIS/Programs)
School PA/Nutrition Standards (NSBP, NSLP, CACFP) *USDA, CDC-NCCDPHP/DPH/School Health Branch
Food Service Guidelines/Healthy Procurement (Municipality Venues, Worksites, Hospitals, Universities,
Food Banks, Park & Rec, Community Venues, FBO)
OST/After School PA/Nutrition Standards*
Early Care and Education
(ECE)
Spectrum of Opportunities
27 states are currently actively
engaged with CDC through tailored
technical assistance, training, and/or
funding to advance state systems
level ECE work through 31 different
projects (SPAN 16, Nemours TAPS
10, ASPHN 5)
SPRINGBOARD OPPORTUNITIESSPAN AND TAPS STATES
GIS Mapping for CACFP Outreach and Promotion (PA, AK)
Early Childhood Outdoor Learning Environments (OH, NY)
Go NAP SACC
Equity Training (PA, MN, CO)
Physical Activity Learning Session (PALS) (MN, AR, CT)
ECE Learning Collaboratives
CATCH Training (AK)
REACH local opportunities in 2020!
ACCOMPLISHMENTS
• Created survey and OMB package for Childcare Survey of Activity and Wellness (C-SAW)
• ECE team provided TA to SPAN, HOP, REACH, Nemours, ASPHN, Diane Craft ~ 27 states have benefited from tailored technical assistance, training, and/or funding to advance state systems level ECE work through 31 different projects (SPAN 16, Nemours 10, ASPHN 5)
• Provided oversight and TA to publish 2018 NRC ECE Licensing Annual Report. Worked to make the report more succinct and user friendly. It is worth mentioning that Tennessee’s 2018 licensing revisions catapulted the state from 39th in the nation to 1st and the Tennessee officials identified Health Department consultation as influencing the 2018 regulatory revisions. Analyses also show a gradual, but significant improvement, in states’ efforts to strengthen child care licensing regulations and prevent childhood overweight and obesity
• Kicked off 3 large cooperative agreements Nemours and ASPHN to advance ECE work
• ASPHN Mini-CoIINs have now supported 17 states to work on system level changes. From 2015 to 2020, 17 states have particiated in Mini-CoIINs from reaching approximately 43 state agencies, 1000 community organizations, 22,000 ECEs and approximately 470,000 children aged 2-5.
•
Child Care Aware
Supporting
providers who
serve low-income
families
5 ASPHN Mini-CoIIN states focusing on improving statewide access to Farm to ECE
*HOP, 14 States Farm to School Supplement
DNPAO Funds NRC for Annual Report
ECE State Licensing Data/Regulations
▪ 2019 Webinar for ECE Stakeholders
▪ DNPAO Digest and ECE Website
▪ Breastfeeding and Infant Feeding
Nutrition, Physical Activity, Screen Time
Childcare survey of Activity and Wellness (C-SAW)
▪ Contract Westat to pilot a State-Based ECE surveillance survey in 4 states
▪ Also includes cross-agency constructs on expulsion and developmental
milestones
DATA: MONITORING STATE ECE SYSTEM & FACILITY CHANGE
Tennessee’s 2018 licensing
revisions catapulted the state
from 39th in the nation to 1st
and the Tennessee officials
identified Health Department
consultation as influencing the
2018 regulatory revisions.
PUBLIC HEALTH - SUPPORT FOR ECE: TOGETHER WE ARE MAKING A DIFFERENCE IN 2019
States Are Strengthening Their ECE
Standards And Helping Providers Meet
Those Standards – 2018 Data
Obesity Standards in State
Licensing Requirements
Have On-Demand Training on
Obesity Prevention for
Professional Development
39States
50States
ASPHN Mini-CoIINs supported 17 states to
work on system level changes. From 2015 to
2019, 17 states have reached approximately
43 state agencies,1000 community
organizations, 22,000 ECEs and
approximately 470,000 children
17
States
56
New! NOPREN FSG Workgroup – Practitioners Invited!
Food Service Guidelines
Email me [email protected]
Technical Assistance,
Training, Tools, and
Guidance
Strategic Policy,
Communications, and
Partnership
Applied Research,
Evaluation, and
Translation
Surveillance and
Epidemiology
2019
SMART CHOICES GUIDE
UPDATED
Surveillance on Top 20
Metropolitan Areas
2020
UPDATED
ASSESSMENT/COMPLIANC
E TOOL
NEW BEHAVIORIAL DESIGN
TOOL
NOPREN & RJWF HER –
New guidance on healthy
foods in Food
Banks/Pantries, Regional
Distribution Centers
FOOD SERVICE GUIDELINES: PARTNERSHIPS, TOOLS
State and Local Recipients are Working in a Variety of Settings:
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▪ State/Local Government Facilities
▪ Hospitals
▪ Colleges and Universities
▪ Private Worksites
▪ Parks and Recreation
▪ Juvenile Corrections
▪ Food Banks/Food Pantries
Finding the best way to implement the USPSTF PWMIs
for low-income children (aged 6-12) & their families
5 D& I Research Projects 2019-2023
CORD 3.0 Focus & Audience: Treatment
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CDC’s Childhood Obesity Research Demonstration (CORD 3.0) 2019
▪ Families want access to quality weight
management programs, clinics and community
▪ Time spent in program matters (dose)
▪ Use of EHRs for screening and referral, clinical-
community linkage for food security, PA
▪ Multi-disciplinary teams include RDs, CHWs
▪ Reduce barriers to participation, reimbursement
CORD 1.0, 2.0 Lessons Learned
Working across the health system to
reach children and families in need
Reaching low-income
children and families
Together We Can Make a Difference: Reaching Families
Years 1, 2 With the National
Association of Community
Health Centers, CDC brought child
weight-management programs to
FQHCs in 5 states
16+
The programs are evidence-based
(MEND), and serve children ages 7-13
with obesity
Family-focused programs help children
build new skills to make healthy
choices
This will help us find the key
components of successful programs, to
bring them to more people in more
places Year 2 underway
PWMI DEMONSTRATION GRANTEE MAP 2019, 2020
▪ CORD 3.0
▪ Massachusetts General
Hospital, Boston, MA
▪ Miriam Hospital, Providence, RI
▪ Stanford University, Stanford,
CA
▪ University of Nebraska Medical
Center, Omaha, NE
▪ Washington University in St.
Louis, St. Louis, MO
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MMWR, NOV. 21, 2019 PAN ET AL.
FUTURE DIRECTION
TELLING OUR STORY
DNPAO 10-YEAR SURVEILLANCE PLAN:
STRATEGIC PRIORITIES
▪ Community environment and policy supports for diet and physical activity
▪ ECE facility practices
▪ Micronutrient status (iron and iodine) in vulnerable populations
▪ Diet and dietary practices in young children
▪ Measured weights and heights in persons >3 m
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• Interactive state-by-state and national data via clickable maps, charts, and tables
• Provides the most recent health and behavior data
• Export data & save visualizations
• Create custom maps and charts
• Data available for 59 indicators
DNPAO’S DATA, TRENDS, AND MAPS
Source: https://www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/dnpao/data-trends-maps/index.html
Select a topic to see nationwide maps, charts, and tables
Source: Rudd Center for Food Policy & Obesity Report. Increasing
Disparities in Unhealthy Food Advertising Targeted to Black and
Hispanic Youth. January 2019.
31¢per person
$9 billion per year
Source: Petersen R, Pan L, Blanck HM. Racial and Ethnic
Disparities in Adult Obesity in the United States: CDC's
Tracking to Inform State and Local Action. Prev
Chronic Dis. 2019 Apr 11;16:E46.
Questions?
67
HAVE YOU HEARD ABOUT OUR ONLINE RESOURCES?
Data Trends and Maps
Interactive database that provides national and state health status and behaviors
State Community Health Media Center
Collection of free and low-cost, audience-tested advertising and support materials
Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity, and Obesity (DNPAO) Website
CDC.gov/nccdphp/dnpao
DNPAO Facebook Page
Facebook.com/CDCEatWellBeActive
DNPAO Twitter
@CDCObesity
@CDCMakeHealthEZ
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion
The findings and conclusions in this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official position of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity, and Obesity (DNPAO)
For more information, contact: [email protected]
Help us keep America healthy and strong. See how at: cdc.gov/nccdphp/dnpao
THANK YOU