Title: Healthy Eating and Obesity Prevention in Washtenaw County
1New information on.
Healthy Eating and Obesity Prevention in
Washtenaw County
Community Health Committee Meeting January 13,
2004
2Healthy Eating Focus Area Process
Develop statement of the issue
Adapted from Evidence-Based Decision Making in
Public Health, Public Health Management Practice,
1999.
Determine what is known through scientific
literature Quantify the issue
- Local data
- Expert input
- Best practices
Evaluate program or policy
Develop key messages and recommendations
Develop action plan
3From the Ann Arbor News, November 13, 2003
4Our Approach to Healthy Eating
Lifespan
Obesity Prevention
5Health Eating Data Within the Social-Ecological
Framework
Abundant fast food restaurants
Individual Behavior e.g. Fruit/veg
intake Portion size Breastfeeding
Vending machines in schools
Lack of local grocery stores
Obesogenic Environment
6Adult Obesity - 2000
7Overweight in Local Children
- Good news
- Overall decrease
- 6 to 11 year age group
- Bad news
- Teen overweight increases
8Individual Behavior Data
I Am What I Ate.And Im Frightened! --new book
by Bill Cosby
95-a-day in Washtenaw Adults
10Whos Avoiding Their Fruits and Veggies??
- Black women (37.8)
- People with less than a high school education
(38.2) - Residents of Ypsilanti (37.9)
- Men overall (35.1)
- Men aged 18-29 years (38.9)
- White men (35.3)
- Black men (38.7)
115-a-day in Washtenaw Kids
- Overall, 16.5 of children eat 5 or more servings
per day (according to parents) - 17.6 have very low intake
- Intake of fruits and vegetables decreases with
age, particularly in children 9 years and older - High correlation between parent intake and child
intake
12Breastfeeding and Obesity Prevention
- Breastfeeding is linked to decreased risk of
obesity, possibly due to physiologic factors in
human milk, feeding and parenting patterns
associated with nursing. - Breastfed infants are leaner at 1 year compared
to formula-fed counterparts. Early growth pattern
may influence later growth.
- Prevention of Pediatric Overweight and Obesity,
Policy Statement, American Academy of Pediatrics,
Vol. 112, No. 2, Aug. 2003, pp. 424-430.
www.aap.org/policy/s100029.html. - Breastfeeding HHS Blueprint for Action on
Breastfeeding, Dept. of HHS, Office of Womens
Health, 2000.
13State and Local WIC Breastfeeding Rates, 2003
WIC Breastfeeding Rate ReportPoint in Time,
8/11/03
14Head Start data slides
15Other Individual Behavior Trends
- Portion sizes increasing
- TV watching (especially by children) increasing
- Convenience foods more available in
supermarkets - Less cooking at home
16The Obesogenic Environmentor Supply Side of
Consumption in Washtenaw County
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19The Obesogenic Society
- Hunter/gatherers ate 75 nuts, vegs, fruits 25
lean game - We eat 17 fruits, vegs 28 fatty meats 55
carbos, sugars, etc - We would need to slow jog for 6-8 miles every day
to exercise as hunter/gatherers - Cheap, fast, low nutrition, high fat foods
- Convenient stores
- Drive-Throughs not much healthy food eaten
in the car? - Perception of increased preparation time for
fresh fruits and vegetables - Decreased time available e.g. Americans working
more hours, more single parent homes, etc.
20The Obesogenic Society
- Linkages between exposure to grocery stores and
restaurants and overweight have not been firmly
established but theyre coming - Sensible, but need to be creative about
interventions and approaches, evaluate well - Anxious to examine Community Prevention Guide
recommendations regarding environmental
approaches regarding overweight and healthy
eating
21Relevant Research
- Lower prevalence of supermarkets and higher
prevalence of independently owned grocery stores
in low-wealth Black neighborhoods and greater
proportion of households without access to
private transportation - Fruit and vegetable intake increases
significantly for each additional supermarket in
census tract - Forty percent of American food budget spent on
fast foods - Low income communities have signficantly fewer
supermarkets per capita than similar
communities - Food insecurity related to overweight among
Latino women in Sacramento, Ca.
- Morland, K. et.al. Neighborhood characteristics
associated with the location of food stores and
food service places. AJPM.20022223-29. - Morland, K., et.al.The Contextual Effect of
the Local Food Environment on Residents Diets
The Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study.
AJPH. 2002921761-1767. - Dietz, W. Obesity in Children UM-SPH
Presentation - Philadelphia Food Trust
- University of California Cooperative
Extension. July 2002
22Data Limitations
- Grocery Stores and Restaurants identified
through Ameritech and Michigan Bell Yellow Pages - Geocoding approximately 75-85 accurate
- Micro analyses ( e.g. census tract level) would
require further work. - X number of groceries per x square miles
- Party Stores defined conservatively
- party in name or known convenient store
- Fast Food defined conservatively
- drive-through drive-in in name or known
drive through chain - take-away primary reputation for delivery or
take out food, e.g. pizza, coney island
23Grocery Stores and Restaurants Per 100,000
PopulationWashtenaw County 1950-2003
Source Waller-Washtenaw County Public Health
24Grocery Stores By TypeWashtenaw County
1950-1990
2003 data omitted due to Yellow Pages
categories shifting Party Stores out of
Grocery Stores to their own category.
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29Restaurants By TypeWashtenaw County 1950-2003
30Restaurants By TypeWashtenaw County 1950-2003
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33School Environment Trends
- Local data based on Physical Activity and Healthy
Eating Asset Survey, April 2003 - Questions based on CDCs School Health Index for
Physical Activity Healthy Eating - 53 of 114 schools in WC returned a survey (46
response rate)
34School Environment Trends
- Junk food accessibility
- Nationally
- 26.3 elementary, 62 Middle/JRHS, 94.9 HS
(2001) students have access to vending machines
at school - 26.8 elementary, 39.4 Middle/JRHS, 59.3 HS
have school store, canteen or snack bar - Washtenaw County
- 18 of elementary schools, 25 of middle schools,
and 69 of high schools allow the sale of junk
foods at school - 29 of schools have policies regarding
availability of low fat foods in school
35School Environment Trends
- Curriculum
- Locally, only 14 of schools teach all 18 healthy
eating curriculum topics recommended by the
School Health Index - Milk Consumption
- Nationally, student milk consumption has
decreased 40 since 1977 - Locally, 91 of schools offer either low-fat or
skim milk in their school meals
36Teens Consumption of Milk and Non-diet Soft
Drinks (ages 12-19)
37Teens Consumption of Milk and Non-diet Soft
Drinks (ages 12-19)
Teens average 1 glass milk per day
Teens drink 2X as much soda as milk, providing
many with 15-20 of their calories
90 girls, 70 boys fail to meet daily calcium
recommendation
38Question of panelistsDo these data match what
you experience with the populations you work
with/study?Panel confirmation of populations of
concern
39Panelists Confirmed Populations of Concern
- Children
- Families
- Adult men
- African American adults
- Community
- People with transportation difficulties (low
income seniors, disabled, teens)
40Common Messages Across Populations (1)
- Prepare more meals at home more cooking.
- Focus on what we are drinking (sweetened
beverages). Define what is a healthy beverage. - Promote community and school gardens
41Common Messages Across Populations (2)
- Increase fiber intake more fruits and
vegetables support plant-based diet - Cut unnecessary sugar and fat
- Define healthy snacking replace junk food
snacking with healthy snacking - Good dine out/fast food options
- Portion size
42Next Steps
- Report summarizing expert panel session input
from those who couldnt come - Present data and results of session at January
2004 Community Health Committee meeting - Create report Promoting Healthy Eating in the
Washtenaw County Community (incorporate CPG data)
-- by spring 2004 - Host community event to release report and
provide training on promoting physical activity
and healthy eating in various settings -- late
spring 2004 - CHC chooses an environmental/policy strategy to
champion in our community
43Now We Need YOUR Help!
- Spring workshop to promote healthy eating and
physical activity for obesity prevention, with a
special focus on active living and walkable
communities - Sessions with hands-on, practical information
about implementing best practices in these
settings community, faith-based, schools,
worksites - Choose a setting for further discussion of the
event