| Literature DB >> 35596846 |
Dena R Herman1, Amy Blom2, Angela Tagtow3, Leslie Cunningham-Sabo4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Childhood obesity disproportionately affects low-income women, children, racial/ethnic minorities, and rural populations. To effectively promote sustainable change, healthy eating and active living initiatives should apply individual plus policy, systems, and environmental (I + PSE) approaches.Entities:
Keywords: Capacity-building; I + PSE; Leadership; MCH nutrition; Partnerships; Technical assistance
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35596846 PMCID: PMC9482593 DOI: 10.1007/s10995-022-03435-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Matern Child Health J ISSN: 1092-7875
Fig. 1Seven Components of the I + PSE Model for Healthy Eating and Active Livinga
I + PSE Technical Assistance Core Components and Timing
| Core Component | Activities | Timing/Time in Activity | Operational Details |
|---|---|---|---|
UMN SAHC online training modules | Registration for and completion of five modules on PSE approaches. | Month 2 – Month 6/ 5 hours | Upon completion of each module, reflection sheets and evaluation assessments are completed to measure comprehension and application of materials. |
Workbook: Individual + Policy, System, and Environmental (I + PSE) Conceptual Framework for Action to Healthy Eating Active Living Initiatives (HEAL)a | Complete tailored action sheets in workbook: I + PSE Conceptual Framework for Action and HEAL strategies in local setting | Month 2 – Month 6/ 5 hours | Application of I + PSE approaches with team of MCH public health practitioners to local setting. Serve as building blocks for development of action plan. |
Participation in Community of Practice (CoP) Discussions | Conduct CoP group discussions and individual coaching | Month 2 – Month 12b/ 5–13 hours | Coaching and technical assistant sessions to discuss lessons learned and barriers encountered. These sessions took place once monthly for 6 months. Schedule is set by group. The CoP discussions support co-learning and resource sharing. Coaching sessions use systematic reflection and action learning as tools to support capacity building, iteration, and system change. |
| Are these the surveys? Need to add anything here? | Months 3, 7/ 2 hours | ditto | |
I + PSE Action Plan for Obesity Prevention (and other PH issues) | Development of action plan for application in local setting | Month 12/ 2–5 hours | Using principals and information gained through online modules, workbook with tailored action sheets, and community of practice discussions, teams develop, review and implement an action plan for local settings. |
a The link to the workbook developed for this TA initiative can be found on the Association of Maternal and Child Health Program’s (AMCHP) Innovation Hub in the practice handout at: https://www.amchpinnovation.org/database-entry/individual-policy-systems-and-environmental-approaches-technical-assistance/.
b The CoP started in Month 1 with an introductory call and took place monthly from Month 2 – Month 6. At that time, calls continued bimonthly through Month 12. Individual coaching took place monthly and as requested throughout the 12-month TA initiative.
Table 2Assessment of Relationship Integration from Midpoint to Endpoint of the Technical Assistance Initiativea
Facilitators, Barriers, Expectations and Outcomes Identified as Major Themes and Subthemes during Qualitative Endpoint Team Interviews
| Theme | Subtheme (Weighted Score) | Interview Quote |
|---|---|---|
| Facilitators | Mentorship (12) | “The one-on-one calls were incredibly helpful. Those are where we got the most direct recommendations for our work, because in those situations I was able to talk specifically about projects and get her guidance and suggestions on how to move some of that forward (Team 1).” |
| Learning Activities Broadened Thoughts (6) | “Going through the activities and the modules and the worksheets helped me identify areas where I could expand the work and do more coverage…it helps you think of new ways to engage new partners (Team 1).” | |
| Support: Co-learning with other teams (4) | “It’s good to have people in the field to talk to…Any of these things are great to talk with other states what they are doing (Team 4).” | |
| Support: Curricular (4) | “I thought this would be a great foundation we could all kind of proceed from so that we’re all starting on the same page and then we would have the support of people who knew more than we did on this topic (Team 3).” | |
| Barriers | Uncertainty/Self Doubt (12) | “Part of it was that I thought originally I wasn’t going to apply because I didn’t think our early learning work had enough structure. I was worried we were unsure how we were going to move forward with it (Team 1).” |
| Working alone difficult (11) | “I mean I did feel like I was kind of floundering for a while and part of it was because I was solo (Team 2).” | |
| Slow Progress/Took Longer (8) | “It would be nice if we knew this opportunity was available for let’s say five years…cause this coalition type thing is going to take a while to really get going, it may take five years for us to get to where we really want to be with it (Team 3).” | |
| Struggle to come together (8) | “The people that do all of our trainings we haven’t renewed their contracts. So everything got put on hold, doing more webinars (Team 4).” | |
| Expectations | Guidance/Direction (7) | “When we learned of this technical assistantship, I thought it was a great opportunity for us to gain insight into what would be the best foundation for us to start with, in trying to eventually get to where our goal is (Team 3).” |
| Expectations: Exceeded (Coaching, TA Activities) (6) | “I think that this whole experience… surpassed what I thought that we would be getting from it, because you are an entire team over there working on this, you know you are knowledgeable on this topic and gave really good support, um, in areas that we did not feel confident in so much so that when we started… (Team 3).” | |
| Resources: Future (4) | “So we first want to get a foundation here at WIC then include others and kind of expand, expand, expand so that we all have that common foundation. And then we can better sell the idea of this coalition (Team 3).” | |
| Resources: Knowledge and tools for impact (4) | “I think for me it was to gain some strong, effective tools to provide the services that we are currently providing, within our program, for me the youth wellness program and to learn more about what is effective and what will make a great impact in our program planning (Team 3).” | |
| Value of Relationships (4) | “I was shown that a lot of things that didn’t really feel like progress like relationship building… (and even just mapping out what is happening in and around early learning work) in our state (Team 1).” | |
| Outcomes | Expansion (Realities and Possibilities) (27) | “There was a lot of interest. I have contact info at the county level for programs that I normally don’t have... (Team 3).” |
| Areas for Improvement (16) | “It might have been good to have done the trainings—the modules as a group—as a webinar and then we had discussions. I did it with people here but there was always different people coming. You know, people wanted to come because everyone didn’t have matching calendars here it was hard even getting anyone to be on the call (Team 4).” | |
| TA Effects: TA moved Thinking Forward (14) | “I do think this experience really did challenge me to expand my thinking about my approaches in early learning work, um, and so I could see myself using that framework again (Team 1).” | |
| TA Effects: Deliverables from TA Project (14) | “We have created the brand—we have successfully created the sort of logo brand to identify all of these different projects as one body of work. And we have that approved through Department of Health which is great (Team 1).” |
Initial and Final Action Plans Categorized by I + PSE Component based on the I + PSE Conceptual Framework for Actiona
| Definition for Healthy Eating and Active Living (HEAL)b from I + PSE Conceptual Framework for Action | Total Activities Initial Plans | Total Activities Final Plans | Sample of Activities from Final Action Plans |
|---|---|---|---|
| Enhance personal, individual, or household’s capability of healthy eating and active living | 1 | 7 | • Early childcare education focus on increasing individual knowledge and skills. • Deepen I + PSE knowledge and skill of Title V staff through Systems Approaches for Healthy Communities. • Increase minutes of physical activity with individuals and families in clinical practice. |
| Reach groups of people with information and resources to promote healthy eating and active living | 6 | 3 | • Farm to ECE curricula have a community involvement and education component. (e.g., CACFP to Farm to ECE) • Incorporate nutrition, food security, breastfeeding and physical activity into Title V needs assessment process. • Work with school food service staff to increase children’s intake of nutritious foods. |
| Inform providers or intermediaries who will transmit skills and knowledge of healthy eating and active living to others | 4 | 6 | • Train Early Achievers Coaches. • Promote and facilitate Title V local grantees participation in Systems Approaches for Healthy Communities. • Work with elementary school teachers to decrease children’s consumption of sugary beverages at school. |
| Convene groups and individuals around healthy eating and active living to meet broader goals and greater public health impacts | 12 | 12 | • Early Learning Workgroup. • Leverage existing partnerships to participate in Title V needs assessment process. • Conduct Organizational Readiness to Change Survey. |
| Adapt regulations and procedures by shaping norms that support healthy eating and active living | 4 | 2 | • Developing trainings for early learning administrators on Healthy Eating and/or Breastfeeding policies. • Local Title V action plans incorporate PSE approaches in addition to the individual approaches. |
| Change physical spaces/natural setting within organizations or larger public environments that support healthy eating and active living | 0 | 2 | • Disseminate information on new grants for early learning programs to expand infrastructure, including modifying kitchens and outdoor spaces. • Existing policies and practices put in place to support healthy meetings, wellness at work, expression of breast milk, active transport. |
| Develop strategies to change laws, regulations, and policies that support healthy eating and active living | 1 | 2 | • Assist with implementation of new statewide licensing standards for early learning programs, which increased requirements for nutrition and physical activity. • Developed two White Papers (i.e. policy brief) on Breastfeeding and Food Security highlighting I + PSE approaches, illustrating nutrition as one of foundations for addressing social determinants of health. |
a Excerpted from: Tagtow, A., Herman, D., & Cunningham-Sabo, L. (2021). Next Generation Solutions to Address Adaptive Challenges in Dietetics Practice: The I + PSE Conceptual Framework for Action. Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, 1–10. 10.1016/j.jand.2021.01.018. This framework was refined based on this TA initiative. I + PSE framework components are shown in Fig. 1.
b HEAL – Healthy Eating Active Living.