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States’ Capacity for Comprehensive Nutrition and Physical Activity Programming

States’ Capacity for Comprehensive Nutrition and Physical Activity Programming. Nutrition and Physical Activity Workgroup (NUPAWG). Presentation Outline. Describe the following related to states comprehensive nutrition and physical activity programming

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States’ Capacity for Comprehensive Nutrition and Physical Activity Programming

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  1. States’ Capacity for Comprehensive Nutrition and Physical Activity Programming Nutrition and Physical Activity Workgroup (NUPAWG)

  2. Presentation Outline • Describe the following related to states comprehensive nutrition and physical activity programming • The purpose, partners, process and context of the assessment • Results: • capacity needs • barriers for comprehensive nutrition and physical activity programming • major successes • Implications for professional organizations and states

  3. Purpose • To better understand states' capacity needs, barriers and successes in accomplishing comprehensive nutrition and physical activity programming.

  4. Assessment Questions • What are the reported capacity needs of states for comprehensive nutrition and physical activity programming? • What are the major state reported barriers for comprehensive nutrition and physical activity programming? • What major successes have states experienced with comprehensive nutrition and physical activity programming?

  5. Partners • The Nutrition and Physical Activity Working Group (NUPAWG), partnering with: • National Association of Chronic Disease Directors (NACDD), • Association of State & Territorial Public Health Nutrition Directors (ASTPHND), • Directors of Health Promotion and Education (DHPE), and the • National Society of Physical Activity Practitioners in Public Health (NSPAPPH)

  6. Process • Working with our partners: • Developed and tested an online assessment • Identified target audience • Distributed assessment via existing infrastructure • Provided follow up and reminder support

  7. Target Audience • Three (3) individuals from every state • Obesity funded states • Program coordinator • Nutrition coordinator • Physical Activity coordinator • Non-obesity funded states • ASTPHND rep. • NACDD rep. • DHPE or NSPAPPH rep.

  8. Context • The responses to the questions are from the perspective of the state health departments’ nutrition/physical activity programming, not local programming.

  9. Results • 50 of the 51 states represented (98%) • Percent reported being members of: • 34% NACDD, • 50% of ASTPHND, • 16% of DHPE, and • 46% of NSPAPPH. • Only 2% reported having no membership to any of these organizations. • 104 total respondents • 60% are coordinators, 12% are managers, and 24% are directors. • The majority (70%) possess a Master’s degree, while 4% possess a doctoral degree.

  10. State Proxy Determination • Step 1: Intrastate ‘objective’ responses were compared—no differences were found • Step 2: The most complete response, for that state, was utilized as the state’s response • The unit of analysis is at the state/district level • 49 states and 1 district = population

  11. Assessment Question #1 • What are the reported capacity needs of states for comprehensive nutrition and physical activity programming?

  12. Leadership • 41 states (82%) reported having dedicated FTE’s for nutrition and/or physical activity programming • 4 = the average number of FTE’s within these states • 28 states reported both nutrition and physical activity FTE’s

  13. Importance of staff for effective programming

  14. Of those that reported NOT having dedicated nutrition and physical activity programming FTE’s:

  15. Needed Resources for More Funding

  16. Planning / Purpose 31 (62%) states reported having a written state strategic plan for comprehensive nutrition and physical activity programming

  17. Self reported capacity level of states

  18. Assessment Question #2 • What are the major state reported barriers for comprehensive nutrition and physical activity programming?

  19. Capacity Barriers

  20. Program Funding Sources

  21. State Allocation • 17 (34%) states reported that state funds are allocated and/or used specifically for nutrition and physical activity programming

  22. Barriers for Comprehensive Nutrition and Physical Activity Program Coordination/Integration

  23. Partnerships % of states reporting having experienced the following in forming or sustaining partnerships

  24. Assessment Question #3 • What major successes have states experienced with comprehensive nutrition and physical activity programming?

  25. Leveraging Funds

  26. Assistance to Local Health Departments

  27. Partnering Efforts

  28. Importance of Partnerships • 92% of the states reported that partnerships are “very or extremely important” for the success of the nutrition and physical activity programming.

  29. Sharing of Assets/Resources • What states receive from partners • Materials • Technical Assistance • Expertise* • What partners receive from states • Technical Assistance* • Expertise • Funding * Reported as “most important”

  30. Take away messages for States • Keep doing the following: • Partnering • Resource management and leveraging • Management/Leadership support • Need to improve the following: • Develop written plan • Market written plan

  31. Take away messages for Professional Orgs. • Physical Activity appears to be advancing: • Nutrition paved the way • Nutrition can potentially learn and grow with PA • Discuss and determine what can be done to help increase states’ capacity as it fits within the orgs. strategic plan • Ideas: • Case studies of states that have successfully leveraged federal and other funding sources • Documenting successful partnerships

  32. Questions and (hopefully) Answers

  33. Contact Information David Dennison Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Division of Nutrition and Physical Activity 4770 Buford Hwy, NE, MS K-24 Atlanta, GA 30341-3717 Work: (770) 488-5390 Email: ddennison@cdc.gov

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