1 / 34

All-Star Dads

All-Star Dads. Increasing Men’s Physical Activity Through Cooperative Extension Programming. Thank you to Rosie Allen, Peggy Powell, Cheryl Case, Daniel Wilson Chuck Stamper, Derek Feldman, Mark Swanson, and L aura Stephenson Rusty Manseau, Graphic Artist University of Kentucky

cale
Download Presentation

All-Star Dads

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. All-Star Dads Increasing Men’s Physical Activity Through Cooperative Extension Programming

  2. Thank you to • Rosie Allen, Peggy Powell, Cheryl Case, Daniel Wilson Chuck Stamper, Derek Feldman, Mark Swanson, and Laura Stephenson • Rusty Manseau, Graphic Artist • University of Kentucky • School of Human Environmental Sciences • College of Public Health • Health Education through Extension Leadership (HEEL) • Department of Family and Consumer Sciences (FCS)

  3. In 1920, women outlived men by an average of one year • Currently, the national average has women outliving men by 5 years

  4. Why? It’s because men: • Die younger—and in greater numbers—of heart disease, stroke, cancer, diabetes, and many other diseases • Don’t take care of themselves as well as women do • Are more likely to engage in unhealthy behavior • Don’t seek medical attention when they need it • Are less likely to have health insurance • Are more likely to work in dangerous occupations

  5. 2008 needs assessment of Kentucky Family and Consumer Sciences (FCS) Extension and Health Education through Extension Leadership (HEEL) programs • Deficient in areas devoted to men’s health within CES programming

  6. Developed a work group of researchers in UK Departments of Health Behavior, Kinesiology and Health Promotion, School of Human Environmental Sciences, and Extension agents from Wolfe, Montgomery, Harrison, and Gallatin Counties • Based on interests, expertise, and background data, we decided to focus on improving men’s physical activity levels in Kentucky • Utilizing the well-developed strategy of Social Marketing

  7. Cooperative Extension agents are viewed as credible sources of information As a result of their community linkages Cooperative Extension professionals reach a broad array of audiences

  8. Traditional Audiences of FCS Extension Programming Traditional Extension audiences know about Cooperative Extension, and choose to be involved The traditional audience has been involved in Extension programs over a period of years

  9. Traditional extension outreach methods • Face to face delivery • Newsletters • Educational objective/lesson plan driven • General messages used for all audiences

  10. Social Marketing is defined as: • A process that applies marketing principles and techniques to create, communicate, and deliver value in order to influence a target audiences’ behavior

  11. Similar to Commercial Marketing • Customer – orientation is critical • All four P’s are considered • Product, Price, Place, and Promotion • Market research is key to success • Results are measured for improvement

  12. Different from Commercial Marketing • Not looking for financial gain – looking for societal benefits • Not looking to sell goods or services – looking to change behavior • Unlike commercial marketing, messages are usually different from “competitors”

  13. Key concepts in social marketing • Audience orientation – learn about your “customers” • Audience segmentation – tailor campaign towards a specific audience • Focus on behavior • Exchange – offer the audience something they want in exchange for the behavior

  14. Part 1 – Focus Groups

  15. Formative Research: Focus Groups • Used to help select and understand who and what • Six focus groups in three counties • One group each with 25-40 years old and 41-55 years old in each county • Focus groups conducted by male researchers • Analysis strongly suggested the theme and direction

  16. Three Main Areas of Focus • Family responsibility • Setting physical activity as a priority • Financial limitations

  17. Family responsibilities were: • A barrier to physical activity because it takes time from their children “… for me it depends on how much of that physical activity requires me to be away from home or away from them [the kids] in general.” • An opportunity to be physically active because their children engaged them “… my interest just fell away from physical activities … [but] I still do physical activities with the kids, you know … Whether I want to or not, they kind of, I have no choice, I gotta chase them down and make sure they’re staying out of trouble… But most of the time, I ride a little bikes here and there with them, and go fishing a lot with them… We swim all the time… That’s about the most physical activity I do anymore is swimming with them.”

  18. Research shows that children with involved fathers: • do better in school • more likely to graduate high school • have more friends • less likely to smoke, abuse drugs or alcohol, engage in risky behavior, start having sex early, or become teen parents.

  19. Physical activity as a priority • Range of barriers were discussed (time, weather, sedentary activities), many respondents agreed that the issue is more setting physical activity as a priority.

  20. Financial Issues • Lack of resources to participate in extracurricular activities • Working multiple jobs to support family decreased time for physical activity • Employer sponsored incentives would increase physical activity, i.e. discounts on health insurance for those who maintain health indicators

  21. Part 2 – Program Development and Implementation

  22. Strategy Development • Focus on men’s physical activity with their children. • Identify father/child activity opportunities that already exist in the communities • Identify father/child activity opportunities available at low or no cost • Develop a community-wide marketing campaign to encourage father/child activity

  23. Tools • Ads • Scorecard • Kick-off • Dice • Yardsign • Website

  24. Focus on men’s physical activity with their children • Successes • Challenges

  25. Identify father/child activity opportunities that already exist in the project communities • Successes • Challenges

  26. Identify father/child activities that are low or no cost within the community • Successes • Challenges

  27. Develop a community marketing campaign to promote father/child interaction and involvement in physical activity • Successes • Challenges

  28. Pilot Data • 149 cards were turned in • Each card totaled a 600 minutes or 10 hours of physical activity • Multiple cards per family • Variety of physical activities

  29. All-Star Dads Future Development Different counties – statewide? Discussions of where we should place materials in counties Engaging other Cooperative Extension Agents

  30. Lessons Learned • What works for one community will not necessarily work for another • Message development is a critical component • Focus groups will need to continue throughout the project to ensure that the message is out there • Reducing price/changing product to fit with existing extension activities

  31. Audience: • Males –not a traditional audience • The framework of social marketing allowed the agents to gain a deeper understanding of the perceptions of the male participants • Focus on Behavior: • The concept of developing a tailored message • Time consuming and required different perspectives, skills, and thought processes than the more traditional educational approaches followed by Extension.

More Related