| Literature DB >> 29215977 |
Seraphine Pitt Barnes1, Syreeta Skelton-Wilson2, Adina Cooper3, Caitlin Merlo3, Sarah Lee3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Since 2013, the State Public Health Actions to Prevent and Control Diabetes, Heart Disease, Obesity and Associated Risk Factors and Promote School Health (State Public Health Actions) program has been implemented to support and reinforce healthy choices and healthy behaviors among the US population. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Division of Population Health's School Health Branch has been a critical component, ensuring that state health departments support schools in adopting nutrition standards and creating a supportive nutrition environment. The objective of this article was to describe early outcomes of the school nutrition strategies of State Public Health Actions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29215977 PMCID: PMC5725147 DOI: 10.5888/pcd14.170106
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prev Chronic Dis ISSN: 1545-1151 Impact factor: 2.830
Performance Measures Data of State Public Health Actions
| Performance Measure | Year 2 Actual | Year 4 Actual | Significance Test |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| B.1.01. Number of local education agencies that received professional development and technical assistance on strategies to create a healthy school nutrition environment | 3,901 | 7,672 |
|
| B.1.02. Number of students in local education agencies where staff received professional development and technical assistance on strategies to create a healthy school nutrition environment | 17,600,600 | 29,313,953 |
|
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| |||
| 2.3.01. Number of local education agencies that received professional development and technical assistance on strategies to create a healthy school nutrition environment | 378 | 609 |
|
| 2.3.02. Number of students in local education agencies where staff received professional development and technical assistance on strategies to create a healthy school nutrition environment | 2,862,354 | 3,695,833 |
|
| 2.3.03. Percentage of local education agencies that have adopted and implemented policies that establish standards (including sodium) for all competitive foods available during the school day | 50.4 | 59.5 |
|
| 2.3.04. Percentage of schools that do not sell less healthy foods and beverages (soda pop or fruit drinks, sport drinks, baked goods, salty snacks, candy) | 45.5 | 58.5 |
|
| 2.3.05. Percentage of local education agencies that have adopted and implemented policies that prohibit all forms of advertising and promotion (eg, contests and coupons) of less nutritious foods and beverages on school property | 29.1 | 33.5 |
|
| 2.3.06. Percentage of schools that prohibit all forms of advertising and promotion for candy, fast food restaurants, or soft drinks | 55.1 | 56.9 |
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| 2.3.07. Percentage of schools that price nutritious foods and beverages at a lower cost while increasing the price of less nutritious foods and beverages | 12.3 | 13.1 |
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| 2.3.08. Percentage of schools that provide information to students or families on the nutrition, caloric, and sodium content of foods available | 50.4 | 54.7 |
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| 2.3.09. Percentage of schools that place fruits and vegetables near the cafeteria cashier, where they are easy to access | 79.2 | 80.2 |
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| 2.3.10. Percentage of schools that allow students to have access to drinking water | 58.6 | 57.9 |
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| 2.3.11. Percentage of schools that offer fruits or non-fried vegetables when foods or beverages are offered at school celebrations | 32.8 | 34.1 |
|
| 2.3.12. Percentage of schools that allow students to purchase fruits and vegetables from vending machines or at the school store, canteen, snack bar, or as à la carte items | 19.9 | 14.4 |
|
Significance was set at P <.05.
Measures reported as mean percentages to represent the average percentages across eligible states.
For duplicate measures, the values are independent. Number of schools surveyed in year 2 was 1,337; number of schools surveyed in year 4 was 1,250.