| Literature DB >> 25927605 |
Larissa Calancie1, Jennifer Leeman2, Stephanie B Jilcott Pitts3, Laura Kettel Khan4, Sheila Fleischhacker5, Kelly R Evenson2, Michelle Schreiner2, Carmen Byker6, Clint Owens2, Jared McGuirt2, Ellen Barnidge7, Wesley Dean8, Donna Johnson9, Jane Kolodinsky10, Emily Piltch11, Courtney Pinard12, Emilee Quinn9, Lauren Whetstone3, Alice Ammerman2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Residents of rural communities in the United States are at higher risk for obesity than their urban and suburban counterparts. Policy and environmental-change strategies supporting healthier dietary intake can prevent obesity and promote health equity. Evidence in support of these strategies is based largely on urban and suburban studies; little is known about use of these strategies in rural communities. The purpose of this review was to synthesize available evidence on the adaptation, implementation, and effectiveness of policy and environmental obesity-prevention strategies in rural settings.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25927605 PMCID: PMC4416478 DOI: 10.5888/pcd12.140540
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prev Chronic Dis ISSN: 1545-1151 Impact factor: 2.830
Ten Nutrition-Related Strategies from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Recommended Community Strategies and Measurements to Prevent Obesity in the United States (16)
| Strategy Number | Strategy Description |
|---|---|
| 1 | Increase availability of healthier food and beverage choices in public service venues. |
| 2 | Improve availability of affordable healthier food and beverage choices in public service venues. |
| 3 | Improve geographic availability of supermarkets in underserved areas. |
| 4 | Provide incentives to food retailers to locate in and/or offer healthier food and beverage choices in underserved areas. |
| 5 | Improve availability of mechanisms for purchasing foods from farms. |
| 6 | Provide incentives for the production, distribution, and procurement of foods from local farms. |
| 7 | Restrict availability of less healthy foods and beverages in public service venues. |
| 8 | Institute smaller portion size options in public service venues. |
| 9 | Limit advertisements of less healthy foods and beverages. |
| 10 | Discourage consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages. |
Citation, Geographic Location, Setting(s), and Evaluation Type for Studies of Nutrition-Related Policy and Environmental Strategies for Obesity Prevention Conducted in Rural Areas of the United States and Canada, 2002–2013
| Citation | Geographic Location | Setting(s) | Evaluation Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bachar et al, 2006 ( | Reservations, Western, North Carolina | Worksites, faith-based institutions, community | Process, outcome |
| Belansky et al, 2010 ( | Colorado | Schools | Process, outcome |
| Brown et al, 2010 ( | Reservations, Montana | Schools, small retail food outlets | Formative |
| Conrey et al, 2003 ( | New York | Farmers markets | Outcome |
| Curran et al, 2005 ( | Reservations, Arizona | Small retail food outlets, community | Process |
| Drummond et al, 2009 ( | Yuma County, Arizona | Child care | Outcome |
| Escoffery et al, 2011 ( | Southwest Georgia | Worksites | Formative |
| Flamm, 2011 ( | Ohio | Farmers markets | Formative |
| Fleischhacker et al, 2012 ( | American Indian tribes in North Carolina | Community | Formative |
| Gittelsohn et al, 2010 ( | First Nations, Nunavut, Canada | Small retail food outlets | Formative |
| Gombosi, 2007 ( | Tioga County, Pennsylvania | Schools, community, worksites | Outcome |
| Harris et al, 2010 ( | West Virginia | Schools | Process |
| Ho et al, 2006 and 2008 ( | First Nations, Ontario, Canada, | Schools, small retail food outlets | Formative, outcome |
| Johnston et al, 2009 ( | Broome County and Tioga County, New York | Schools | Outcome |
| Knol et al, 2010 ( | Southeastern United States | Health facilities | Outcome |
| Kunkel et al, 2003 ( | South Carolina | Farmers markets | Outcome |
| Laing et al, 2012 ( | Mason County, Washington | Worksites | Process, outcome |
| Mead et al, 2010 and 2013 ( | First Nation, Canadian Arctic | Small retail food outlets, community | Formative, outcome |
| Nanney et al, 2008 ( | Utah | Schools | Process |
| Novotny et al, 2011 ( | Hawaii | Small retail food outlets, community | Process |
| O’Brien et al, 2010 ( | Maine | Schools | Outcome |
| Phillips et al, 2013 ( | Arkansas | Schools | Process, outcome |
| Rosecrans et al, 2008 ( | First Nation, Ontario, Canada | Small retail food outlets, community, schools | Process, outcome |
| Ruelle et al, 2011 ( | Reservations, North Dakota and South Dakota | Farmers markets | Process |
| Schetzina et al, 2009 ( | Northeast Tennessee | Schools | Formative |
| Schwarte et al, 2010 ( | California Central Valley | Community, worksites, schools, public health | Process |
| Setala et al, 2011 ( | Reservations, Arizona, Utah, New Mexico | Small retail food outlets, farmers markets | Formative |
| Sussman and Davis, 2010 ( | New Mexico | Schools, small retail food outlets, community | Formative |
| Vastine et al, 2005 ( | Reservations, Arizona | Small retail food outlets | Formative |
CDC Nutrition-Related Strategiesa Applied in Policy, Environmental, and Community-Level Intervention Studies Conducted in Rural Settings and Approaches for Adapting and Implementing Strategies in Rural Settings, 2002–2013
| COCOMO Strategy Applied | Approaches to Adapting and Implementing Obesity Prevention Strategies in Rural Areas | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Citation | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | NS | Accommodate Distance | Tailor to Culture | Build Partnerships |
| Bachar et al, 2006 ( | x | x | ||||||||||||
| Belansky et al, 2010 ( | x | x | x | |||||||||||
| Brown et al, 2010 ( | x | x | x | x | ||||||||||
| Conrey et al, 2003 ( | x | x | x | |||||||||||
| Curran et al, 2005 ( | x | x | ||||||||||||
| Drummond et al, 2009 ( | x | x | ||||||||||||
| Escoffery et al, 2011 ( | x | x | x | x | ||||||||||
| Flamm et al, 2011 ( | x | x | x | |||||||||||
| Fleischhacker et al, 2012 ( | x | x | ||||||||||||
| Gittelsohn et al, 2010 ( | x | x | x | x | ||||||||||
| Gombosi et al, 2007 ( | x | |||||||||||||
| Harris et al, 2010 ( | x | x | x | |||||||||||
| Ho et al, 2006 and 2008 ( | x | x | x | x | ||||||||||
| Johnston et al, 2009 ( | x | x | x | |||||||||||
| Knol et al, 2010 ( | x | x | x | x | ||||||||||
| Kunkel et al, 2003 ( | x | x | ||||||||||||
| Laing et al, 2012 ( | x | |||||||||||||
| Mead et al, 2010 and 2013 ( | x | x | x | x | ||||||||||
| Nanney et al, 2008 ( | x | |||||||||||||
| Novotny et al, 2011 ( | x | x | x | x | ||||||||||
| O’Brien et al, 2010 ( | x | x | x | |||||||||||
| Phillips et al, 2013 ( | x | x | x | x | x | |||||||||
| Rosecrans et al, 2008 ( | x | |||||||||||||
| Ruelle et al, 2011 ( | x | x | x | |||||||||||
| Schetzina et al, 2009 ( | x | x | ||||||||||||
| Schwarte et al, 2010 ( | x | x | x | x | ||||||||||
| Setala et al, 2011 ( | x | x | ||||||||||||
| Sussman and Davis et al, 2010 ( | x | x | x | |||||||||||
| Vastine et al, 2005 ( | x | x | x | x | ||||||||||
Abbreviation: CDC, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; COCOMO, Recommended Community Strategies and Measurements to Prevent Obesity in the United States; NS, not specified.
From CDC’s Recommended Community Strategies and Measurements to Prevent Obesity in the United States (16).
Accommodate long distances to food sources.
Tailor strategies to distinct cultures and food preferences.
Build strong local partnerships when implementing strategies.
Description of Articles Reporting Policy and Environmental, Psychosocial, Behavioral, or Biological Outcomes After Implementing Nutrition-Related Policy and Environmental Strategies For Obesity Prevention in Rural Communities, 2002–2012
| Citation | Design | Sample Size, Settings if Reported | Policy and Environment Change | Psychosocial Change | Behavioral Change | Biological Change |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bachar et al, 2006 ( | Pretest–posttest, no comparison | 1 school, up to 600 students | Increased availability of fruits and vegetables in school cafeterias | Improved knowledge about how to make healthier food choices among school children | — | — |
| Belansky et al, 2010 ( | Pretest–posttest, no comparison | 45 schools | Increased number of schools with nutrition-related policies | — | — | — |
| Conrey et al, 2003 ( | Time series, no comparison | All New York State FMNP participants | — | — | Increased redemption of FMNP coupons used to purchase produce at farmers markets | — |
| Drummond et al, 2009 ( | Pretest–posttest, no comparison | 17 child care centers | Increased number of child care centers with nutrition-related policies and environmental changes | — | — | — |
| Gombosi et al, 2007 ( | Pretest–posttest, nonrandomized comparison | 9 restaurants, approximately 4,200 students in 3 school districts and 2 private schools | 9 restaurants initiated menu labeling | — | — | BMI increased less among children in intervention versus comparison community |
| Ho et al, 2008 ( | Pretest–posttest, no comparison | 4 communities, 95 community members | Higher food acquisition and intention scores but not for food preparation, self-efficacy, or outcome expectancies | — | Weight status not changed | |
| Johnston et al, 2009 ( | Pretest–posttest, no comparison | 15 school districts, up to 40,000 students | Schools more consistently complied with existing policy limiting calories from fat and saturated fat in school meals | More parents perceived school lunches as nutritious at posttest compared with pretest | Increased purchases of fresh fruits and vegetables; 3% increase in participation of school meal programs | — |
| Knol et al, 2010 ( | Pretest–posttest, no comparison | 5 transitional group homes for clients with mental illness; 65 clients | Group homes implemented policies about food options available in vending machine and cafeterias | — | — | Weight loss among most overweight and obese residents |
| Kunkel, 2003 ( | Postsurvey | Unspecified number of farmers markets, 658 seniors participating in SFMNP in South Carolina | Farmers markets increased use of SFMNP | Increased intentions to eat fruits and vegetables year round, food preparation knowledge, and purchases of produce they had never tried before | — | — |
| Laing et al, 2012 ( | Pretest–posttest, no comparison | 23 worksites | Increase in number of worksites with a health-related policy | — | — | — |
| Mead et al, 2013 ( | Pretest–posttest, non-randomized comparison | 4 communities, | — | Increased knowledge, self-efficacy, and intentions related to healthy foods among intervention participants compared with control group; decrease in healthy and unhealthy food acquisition scores | — | No change in BMI |
| O'Brien et al, 2010 ( | Cross sectional | 123 intervention schools, 205 control schools; 80,428 students | Increased number of schools with nutrition-related policies; increased odds of having healthy foods available at school events | — | Reduced odds of students drinking more than 2 sodas per week | — |
| Phillips et al, 2013 ( | Pretest–posttest, no comparison | All public schools in the state; number ranged from 113 to 496 per school | Increased availability of healthy versus unhealthy foods and beverages available in schools | — | Reduced purchasing of beverages from vending machines among adolescents with access to vending machines; no change in reported soda consumption | — |
| Raczynski et al, 2009 ( | Pretest–posttest, no comparison | Statewide policy | Increased number of schools with nutrition-related policies and increased availability of healthy versus unhealthy foods and beverages | — | — | Percentage of overweight and obese children remained stable after the policy went into place |
| Saksvig et al, 2005 ( | Pretest–posttest, no comparison | 1 school, 122 students | School initiated a policy banning high-fat and high-sugar snack foods; initiated a school breakfast program | Improved dietary knowledge, intention, self-efficacy | Decreased percentage of energy from fat among boys, not girls; Increased fiber intake, especially among those participating in school breakfast program | BMI and percent body fat increased |
Abbreviation: —, not measured; BMI, body mass index; FMNP, Farmers Market Nutrition Program; SFMNP, Senior Farmers Market Nutrition Program.