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National Child Nutrition Program Cluster Evaluation: Preliminary Findings. Evaluation team Colin Bell Jan Garrard Dionne Holland Boyd Swinburn. Background: National Child Nutrition Program. A community grants program established in 1999 by Commonwealth Department of Health and Ageing
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National Child Nutrition Program Cluster Evaluation: Preliminary Findings Evaluation team Colin Bell Jan Garrard Dionne Holland Boyd Swinburn
Background: National Child Nutrition Program • A community grants program established in 1999 by Commonwealth Department of Health and Ageing • Aimed at improving nutrition among children aged 0 to 12 years and pregnant women • Focus on priority communities: • Rural and remote communities • Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities • Lower socio-economic communities • 110 community-based projects funded nationally • 18 projects in Victoria - $2,190,300 over three year period Deakin University 2003
Evaluation: Background • Evaluation not built into overall program planning • No specific evaluation budget • Importance of evaluation recognised by Victorian office of Dept of Health & Ageing • 9 projects committed $3,000 each to fund a ‘cluster’ evaluation • Additional $60,000 from Dept of Health & Ageing • Deakin University contracted to conduct the evaluation Deakin University 2003
Evaluation: Preview • A ‘retrofitted’ evaluation strategy • Optimum balance of common measures while acknowledging the uniqueness of projects, populations and settings • Evidence base for effective community-based child nutrition programs is poor – good practice often not documented, disseminated and acknowledged • A practical, feasible evaluation strategy designed to meet the needs of funding body, project management agencies and practitioners Deakin University 2003
Evaluation: Objectives • To assess intended and unintended impacts of individual projects • To gain an understanding of key implementation issues impacting on project success • To draw upon collective learnings from the 9 projects to guide future efforts in community-based child nutrition Deakin University 2003
Evaluation: Design & Methods • Multiple case study design (9 ‘cases’) • Process measures (ie. what have they done?) and • Impact measures (ie. what have they achieved?) • At individual project level - evaluation team assisted each project to conduct process and impact evaluation • Across projects, evaluation team conducted a total of 53 key informant interviews – combination of core questions and project-specific questions • Enabled ‘detection’ (but not quantitative measurement) of impacts – useful for unintended impacts • Provided data on important how? and why? questions Deakin University 2003
Evaluation: Lessons Learned • Build evaluation planning into project planning • Provide adequate resources for evaluation (approx 10-15% of project budget) • Recognise that responsive, needs-based, individually tailored community-based projects will rarely meet the requirements for rigorous quantitative assessment • Such projects rarely find their way into conventional evidence-based reviews. Deakin University 2003
Lessons Learned (cont) • Focus instead on what can be achieved (measured impacts) in what settings with what population groups under what conditions – recognise this will vary in different priority settings • Distil common achievements and learnings if possible • Provide a mechanism for sharing experiences via a ‘community-based projects’ evidence-base. Deakin University 2003
Cluster Evaluation Projects • ‘High Five’ School project – Warrnambool • ‘Eat Well, Grow Well’ – Hamilton, Southern Grampians Shire • H2O for Moonee Valley Kids – North Melbourne • ‘Breast is Best’ – Brimbank, West Melbourne • ‘Healthy Eating for Country Kids’ – Swan Hill • ‘Who’s Eating Gilbert Grape and Vicki Vegetable’ – Murray Valley Aboriginal Cooperative, Robinvale • ‘A healthy family is built on a good diet of nutritious food’ - Robinvale • ‘Child nutrition in the West’ – West Melbourne • ‘Food Facts for preschoolers’ - KPV Deakin University 2003
South West Health Care Aim: To increase the fruit and vegetable intake in order to improve the overall nutrition of prep to year 4 children in the South West of Victoria • ↑largest in yr 2&3 • Also ↑ in serves • Vegetable intake was very low (~5%) & only increased at one of the schools • Supporting curriculum changes and parent involvement Deakin University 2003
01/02 75% 69% 51% 34% ISIS Primary Care Aim:To increase the proportion and duration of breastfed babies in the City of Brimbank, particularly in low SES and CALD communities • Distributed BF promotion kits to GPs & MCHNs • Prenatal BF promotion checklist adopted by Sunshine Hospital • Breastfeeding guide for new mothers (Vietnamese) • Specific support and promotion of BF in Vietnamese community • 66 BF-friendly venues • Adoption of Lactation policy by ISIS Deakin University 2003
100 towns 53 towns 48 towns Murray Valley Aboriginal Cooperative Murray Valley Aboriginal Co-Op Aim: Improve nutritional knowledge and healthy eating patterns of pregnant women, young mothers/caregivers of children aged 0-12 years and children within local Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders • Murray Valley River Quest • PAN messages at ‘stops’ on route • Reached 516 children • Teachers said it was easy to implement and raised awareness • In 2003 hours have ↑ Deakin University 2003
Eat Well – Grow Well Western District Health Service • Education sessions effective in improving knowledge of participants • Supermarket tours and visits to new mums also beneficial • ↑awareness of conditions which may require dietetic referral among WDHS staff Aim: To improve the nutritional health of children aged 0-5 years in the Southern Grampians Shire Deakin University 2003
Swan Hill District Hospital • ↑access to nutrition education for pregnant/new mums • Good readership of newsletter and newspaper column • These were helpful for making healthy food choices Aim: To improve the eating habits of all children and pregnant women in Swan Hill and surrounding district, providing GPs with nutrition information kit Deakin University 2003
Doutta Galla Community Health Service • ‘H2O for Moonee Valley Kids’ • Drink water rather than sweet drinks • ‘Food and Families’ • 4 week course on nutrition information and parents skills • 10-14 Somali women • Breastfeeding, bottle, solids, vitamin D Aim: To improve the healthy food intake of infants and children aged 0-12 years with Kensington, Flemington, North Melbourne and Ascot Vale Deakin University 2003
Western Region Health Centre Western Region Health Centre Aim: Increase nutritional knowledge and capacity of pregnant women, parents and children ages 0-12 with CALD and recently arrived communities, to enhance healthy eating patterns • ‘Eating altogether-5 times better’ • Fruit, vegetable & water promotion at 2 primary schools • Bilingual child education program • In 1 year, 700 people from LD communities participated in 75 nutrition education sessions Deakin University 2003
Robinvale District Health Service • Parent cooking classes • Multi-cultural food day • Attended by 120-180 people • Nutrition education sessions • Large Polynesian population • Breakfast program at schools • Linked with MVAC Aim: Improve nutritional knowledge and healthy eating patterns of parents and children in Robinvale Deakin University 2003
Kindergarten Parents Victoria Aim: To increase the capacity of early childhood services to deliver consistent, relevant and current nutrition information to preschool children and their parents • Staff training sessions • 9 locations throughout Victoria with over 170 participants • ↑ knowledge of Aust. Dietary Guidelines for children, role of nutrition policy, value of partnerships b/w parents and early childhood staff • Parent workshops • At sessional preschools, long day care, other services • ↑ understanding of childhood nutrition • Resources • Staff training sessions, ‘parent workshop’ package, Food Safety Information Sheet, nutrition built into existing KPV resources (eg Preschool Matters’ Deakin University 2003
Cluster Evaluation • 53 semi-structured key informant interviews completed • 11 project officer interviews • 39 key informant interviews (single and focus groups) • 2 Steering Committee member interviews • Combination of core and project specific questions • Presenting preliminary findings today • Report available early 2004 Deakin University 2003
Reported Impacts Increased collaborative links Deakin University 2003
Reported Impacts (cont) Diffusion of nutrition messages • Reached target groups • Children, parents, carers, pre-schools, kindergartens, primary schools • And beyond….. • Program participants ‘spread the message’ • Fathers read brochures on breastfeeding aimed at mothers • Program participants ‘modelled’ healthy eating behaviours Deakin University 2003
Reported Impacts (cont) Spin-offs • Children • Increased concentration in class • Likely reduction in dental carries • Families • Budget savings (eg. not purchasing soft drink) • Bilingual workers • Future work • Empowerment Deakin University 2003
Capacity Building Framework Organisational Development • Build Capacity • Infrastructure • Program sustainability • Problem solving Workforce development Resource allocation Partnerships Leadership Source: Hawe 1999 Context Deakin University 2003
Organisational Development • Management support • Projects more effective when management understood the complexity of community work and supported it • Recognition of work • Projects better supported within the organisation when encouraged to showcase their achievements • Additional support from co-workers • Policy development Deakin University 2003
Workforce Development • Project officer training and previous experience in community work • Needed a sound knowledge of community work and how it differs from clinical work • Generally, new graduates who lacked field experience struggled unless provided with additional support within the workplace • Projects easier to implement when working in a team environment • Important to share learnings with co-workers to gain support and increase organisational capacity to carry out community work Deakin University 2003
Resource Allocation • Control of project resources (incl budget) • Advice on how to get the ‘best bang for your buck’ • Project officers need to be aware existing resources • ‘Cost-effectiveness’ of different strategies • Continual planning towards obtaining additional resources, especially into the future Deakin University 2003
Partnerships • Can be extremely effective • Working towards a common goal, but from varied view points • Provided additional ‘sponsorship’ • Often opened up opportunities for shared access to experts and resources • Enhanced opportunities for sustainability as multiple organisations/individuals were able to share the role lessening the burden (time and money) on one person • Often enabled strategic responses across multiple settings Deakin University 2003
Leadership • Essential • Creative problem solving skills • Needs to be able to take on the view points and the needs of the local community and develop and re-develop strategies where needed • Continuity • Leadership role best held by the same person throughout the project • Empowerment of others Deakin University 2003
Context • Physical, economic, political, organisational and cultural environments of the project • Currently high profile of nutrition • Organisations with community-based and population focus Deakin University 2003
What does the literature say about success factors for community-based interventions? • Limited literature around community-based child nutrition programs • Community-based smoking programs have been at it a lot longer! • Systematic review of 32 studies covering 30 years of community-based interventions to reduce smoking (Secker-Walker et al. 2003) Deakin University 2003
Lessons for child nutrition promotion(Adapted from Secker-Walker et al. 2003) • Child nutrition needs to be recognised by the community as an important issue • Community organisation, assessment of community capacity, and the identification of individuals and organisations interested in supporting nutrition interventions are important during project development. • Community members and staff need skills in working with diverse groups and in health education • Coalitions need several months to form, and a year or more to become effective change agents in their community Deakin University 2003
Lessons for child nutrition promotion(cont) • Interventions to improve child nutrition need to continue for several years • Resources for promoting good nutrition and support for healthy eating should be readily available throughout the community • It is important to involve, train, and provide referral services and resources for health professionals • The use of mass media (print, radio, television) is especially useful for modelling behaviour change, and for changing community norms about nutrition Deakin University 2003
Conclusion • Projects have had some good impacts at the local level • Contributed to the knowledge base about effective implementation • Important to disseminate these findings Deakin University 2003