Title: CDC Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity and Obesity Activities
1CDC Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity and
Obesity Activities
- ASNNA Annual Meeting
- February 16, 2010
- Christa Essig, MPH
- Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity and
Obesity - Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
- FNCS/USDA Detail
- The findings and conclusions herein are those of
the author(s) - and do not necessarily represent the official
position of - the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
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3Obesity negatively impacts the nations economy
- Medical costs associated with obesity for the
United States have risen to - 147 billion in 2008 dollars.
- Finkelstein et al., 2009
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5Division of Adult and Community Health
- Action Institutes and Training
- Tools for Community Action
- Community Health Resources Database
- Community Health Assessment and Group Evaluation
(CHANGE) Tool - Action Guides
- Evaluation and Innovation
- Program Monitoring and Evaluation
- Program Success Stories
- Journal Articles on Program Successes
- http//www.cdc.gov/healthycommunitiesprogram/
6Division of Adolescent and School Health
http//www.cdc.gov/HealthyYouth/about/index.htm
7Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity and
Obesity
8DNPAO Goals
- Increase health-related physical activity through
population-based approaches. - Improve those aspects of dietary quality most
related to population burden of chronic disease
and unhealthy child development. - Decrease prevalence of obesity through prevention
of excess weight gain and maintenance of healthy
weight loss.
9Activities SupportPrinciple Target Areas
- Environments/policies that foster
- - Physical activity
- - Consumption of fruits and vegetables
- - Breastfeeding
- Environments/policies that discourage
- - Television viewing
- - Consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages
- - Consumption of high-energy dense foods
- (high calorie/low nutrient foods)
10Strategies to Support Behavior Targets
- To Decrease Consumption of High Energy Dense
Diets - Apply nutrition standards in childcare, school,
and workplace settings - Promote menu labeling in states and communities
- Support interventions for retail food in
underserved areas - To Decrease Consumption of Sugar-Sweetened
Beverages - Ensure ready access to safe and palatable
(quality) drinking water - Limit access to sugar-sweetened beverages
- Decrease relative cost of healthy beverages
through differential pricing and/or taxation of
sugar-sweetened beverages - To Increase Fruit and Vegetable Consumption
- Establish food policy councils
- Support farm-to-where-you-are programs
- Improve access to retail food stores that
provide fruits and vegetables
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12Story, M., K. M. Kaphingst, et al. (2008).
"Creating healthy food and eating environments
policy and environmental approaches." Annual Rev
Public Health 29 253-72, Figure 1.
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14CDC Supports State-Based Nutrition, Physical
Activity, and Obesity Programs
- Currently funds 25 states, with a total of 16.1
million a year average of 700,000 per state
award - CDC contributes to the development of state
obesity programs by providing states with - - program funding
- - training
- - technical assistance
- - program oversight
- For more information
- Claire Heiser
- Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity, and
Obesity - E-mail cheiser_at_cdc.gov
- Web site http//www.cdc.gov/obesity/stateprogram
s/index.html
15Community Guide Promoting Physical Activity
-
- Environmental and policy approaches are designed
to provide environmental opportunities, support,
and cues to help people be more physically
active. - The physical environment
- Social networks
- Organizational norms and policies
- Laws
- Public health professionals, community
organizations, legislators, departments of parks,
recreation, transportation, and planning, and the
media - http//www.thecommunityguide.org/pa/environmental-
policy/index.html
16CDC Recommended Community Strategies and
Measurements to Prevent Obesity in the US
http//www.cdc.gov/obesity/downloads/community_str
ategies_guide.pdf
17Promote the Availability of Affordable Health
Foods and Beverages
- Communities should
- Increase availability of healthier food and
beverage choices in public service venues - Improve availability of affordable healthier food
and beverage choices in public service venues - Improve geographic availability of supermarkets
in underserved areas - Provide incentives to food retailers to locate in
and/or offer healthier food and beverage choices
in underserved areas - Improve availability of mechanisms for purchasing
foods from farms - Provide incentives for the production,
distribution, and procurement of foods from local
farms
18American Recovery and Reinvestment
ActPrevention and Wellness Initiative
-
- Emphasis on policy and environmental change at
state and local levels - - Increase levels of physical activity
- - Improve nutrition
- - Decrease obesity rates and
- - Decrease smoking prevalence, teen smoking
initiation, and exposure to second-hand
smoke. - www.cdc.gov/chronicdisease/recovery
19Examples of Policies and Programs
- Improving access to healthy foods in schools
through changes in school meal planning and
purchasing across the state. - Increasing physical activity among school
children by implementing improvements to physical
education programs and expanding the number of
minutes students are physically active. - Promoting breastfeeding through hospital and
workplace policies to support initiation and
continuation of breastfeeding. - Reducing exposure to secondhand tobacco smoke
through statewide policies limiting smoking in
public and work places.
20MAPPS - Nutrition
- Media
- Access
- Point of Purchase/ Promotion
- Price
- Social Support and Services
-
- http//www.cdc.gov/chronicdisease/recovery/
21Media
- Media and advertising restrictions consistent
with federal law - Promote healthy food/drink choices
- Counter-advertising for unhealthy choices
22Access
- Healthy food/drink availability (e.g., incentives
to food retailers to locate/offer healthier
choices in underserved areas, healthier choices
in child care, schools, worksites) - Limit unhealthy food/drink availability (whole
milk, sugar sweetened beverages, high-fat snacks) - Reduce density of fast food establishments
- Eliminate transfat through purchasing actions,
labeling initiatives, restaurant standards - Reduce sodium through purchasing actions,
labeling initiatives, restaurant standards - Procurement policies and practices
- Farm to institution, including schools,
worksites, hospitals and other community
institutions
23- Point of Purchase/Promotion
- Signage for healthy vs. less healthy items
- Product placement attractiveness
- Menu labeling
- Price
- Changing relative prices of healthy vs. unhealthy
items (e.g. through bulk purchase/procurement/comp
etitive pricing). - Social Support Services
- Support breastfeeding through policy change and
maternity care practices
24Quality Control
- Project officer oversight, provide tools,
guidance and TA - Monitor performance and outcomes
- Ongoing feedback to maximize health impact of
projects - CDC and HHS will use the lessons learned from the
initiative to improve the design and delivery of
their state and local health promotion and
disease prevention programs
25Final Award Amounts for State and Territory
Component
- CDC received 58 applicationsfrom all 50 states
-
- All applicants receive funding for efforts in
nutrition, physical activity, and tobacco
control. - TOTAL AWARD AMOUNT 119,067,687
- http//www.cdc.gov/chronicdisease/recovery/docs/
State_prevention_and_wellness_ARRA_awards_fact_she
et.pdf
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28CDC Resources
- Community Recommendations
- www.cdc.gov/obesity/downloads/community_strategie
s_guide.pdf - The State Indicator Report on Fruits and
Vegetables, 2009 http//www.fruitsandveggiesmatte
r.gov/indicatorreport - DNPAO State Legislation Database
http//apps.nccd.cdc.gov/DNPALeg/ - ARRA
- www.cdc.gov/chronicdisease/recovery
- State Programs
- www.cdc.gov/obesity/stateprograms/index.html
- http//www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/dnpao
- http//www.cdc.gov/healthyyouth/