| Literature DB >> 25209072 |
Joel Gittelsohn1, Elizabeth Anderson Steeves, Yeeli Mui, Anna Y Kharmats, Laura C Hopkins, Donna Dennis.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Childhood obesity rates in the U.S. have reached epidemic proportions, and an urgent need remains to identify evidence-based strategies for prevention and treatment. Multi-level, multi-component interventions are needed due to the multi-factorial nature of obesity, and its proven links to both the social and built environment. However, there are huge gaps in the literature related to doing these kinds of interventions among low-income, urban, minority groups.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25209072 PMCID: PMC4168194 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-14-942
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Figure 1B’More healthy communities for kids conceptual framework.
Selected process evaluation measures and minimum standards per intervention level
| Intervention level | Intervention component | Minimum standards for delivery |
|---|---|---|
| Policy | # of attendees/meeting | >25 |
| # of different sectors represented/meeting | >6 | |
| # ABM sub-groups formed/year | >2 | |
| Wholesaler | # of food items that meets the nutrition guidelines per phase | ≥3 |
| # wholesalers that provide discount to BHCK intervention stores | 2 | |
| % of shelf labels correctly placed | ≥75% | |
| Recreation Center/Peer Leader | # of planned intervention sessions delivered by youth-leaders | ≥75% |
| # of kid interactions per session at the recreation center | ≥12 | |
| Corner Store/Carryout | # of NEW promoted foods stocked per phase | ≥4 |
| # of kid interactions during interactive session/store/phase | ≥20 | |
| # healthier options on menu (designated by green leaf)/phase | ≥4 | |
| # reduced price healthier options on menu/phase | ≥4 | |
| Family/SMS messaging, social media | % families receiving invitation to join SMS program | 90% |
| % that join | 40% | |
| # SMS text messages sent to participants/week | 2 | |
| % text messages received | 80% | |
| % families that participate in one of BHCK’s social media websites | 50% | |
| # posts/week on 1+ social media websites | 1 | |
| # goal-setting messages/week | 1 |
Impact evaluation components for the BHCK trial per intervention level
| Intervention Level | Impact/outcome measures |
|---|---|
| Policy | % of action items achieved/year |
| # of health-related issues put on policymaker’s agenda/year | |
| # of health-related issues introduced by policymaker/year | |
| Wholesaler | % change in sales of promoted foods based on collected sales data from wholesalers |
| % change in sales of promoted foods to BHCK corner stores and carryouts | |
| Recreation Center | Changes in recreation center policies regarding the food environment |
| Changes in the recreation center food environment (e.g., after-school snack program, concession stand foods) | |
| Corner Store/Carryout | # of posters, shelf labels, shelf talkers, etc. seen by BHCK participants (exposure) |
| # promoted foods purchased/consumed by BHCK participants | |
| # of giveaways received by BHCK participants | |
| # units of promoted foods sold | |
| Adult/household (SMS) | Household food purchasing (healthy and unhealthy foods) |
| Healthiness of common methods of food preparation | |
| Change in psychosocial factors (knowledge, self-efficacy, intentions) | |
| Change in weight, BMI | |
| Children and Youth Leaders | Frequency of purchase of healthy and unhealthy foods |
| Healthiness of food preparation methods | |
| Change in dietary patterns (e.g., total calories, total fat, FV servings, HEI scores, etc.) | |
| Change in psychosocial factors (knowledge, self-efficacy, intentions, outcome expectations) | |
| Change in BMI percentile |