2021 Nutrition, Food Systems, and HealthPlan of Work

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Kenton County CES

Title:
2021 Nutrition, Food Systems, and Health
MAP:
2021 Physical and Mental Health
Agents Involved:
Kathy Byrnes, Joan Bowling, Dan Allen, Diane Kelley, Denise Donahue, Brandon George
MAJOR PROGRAM 1:
Active Living and Health Promotions General
MAJOR PROGRAM 2:
Nutrition and Food Systems General
MAJOR PROGRAM 3:
Substance Use Prevention and Recovery General
MAJOR PROGRAM 4:
Food Preparation and Preservation
Situation:

       According to Kentucky By the Numbers, nearly 13% of Kenton County adults have diabetes, 33% suffer with hypertension, 37% are obese, and nearly 17% report poor or fair health. According to “Kentucky Health Facts”, Kenton County citizens on average report four days per month (13%) as “physically unhealthy days, and 4% of citizens reported “mentally unhealthy days” per month.  
       37% of youth 10-17 are overweight or obese, and 51% of Kentucky youth report not exercising regularly.  In addition, the rate of both fatal and nonfatal overdoses doubled during 2015-2017 in Kenton County and vaping rates nearly doubled among Kentucky middle and high school students.  25% of youth in Kentucky report some form of emotional or behavioral condition, and suicide rates are at a record high.
         Kenton County citizens are fortunate to have 5 farmers markets throughout the county. Food deserts in certain communities, however, still remain, with 13% of Kenton County citizens considered food insecure, and over 17,000 receiving food stamps.        
 
        The recent county needs assessment report, County Extension Council, plus other local advisory councils have identified the high number of overweight youth and adults, the need for increased physical activity, a foundation of nutrition knowledge and skills, along with the necessity of tools to address positive mental health and substance use prevention as vital for our community.  

Long-Term Outcomes:


Intermediate Outcomes:


Initial Outcomes:


Evaluation:

Outcome:   Nutrition knowledge, skills, competencies, and dietary intake

Indicator:   Number of individuals who reported: use knowledge and skills to improve food-shopping management; utilize the food label to make healthy choices.
 Number of individuals who reported: eating 4-6 servings of fruits and/or vegetables daily, increased consumption of other nutrient dense food, and decreased consumption of low nutrient foods.

Method: Self-report surveys; specific curricula or program evaluations

Timeline:   Pre-post implementing curricula or program


Outcome: Safe preparation and preservation of food 

Indicator:   Number of individuals who reported: preparing more home-cooked meals; modifying ingredients and/or preparation techniques to improve nutrition; increased food preservation knowledge, amount of food preserved at home through canning, freezing, or drying. 

Method: Self-report survey; specific curricula or program evaluations

Timeline:  Pre-post implementing curricula or program


Outcome:   Chronic Disease Prevention

Indicator:   Number of individuals reporting one or more health indicators (cholesterol, bp, body mass index, blood glucose) improved.

Method: Self-report surveys about dietary intake or improvements; specific curricula or program evaluations

Timeline: Pre-post implementing curricula or program


Outcome:  Local availability and fresh food usage

Indicator:   Number of individuals who reported: utilizing delivery systems/access points (e.g., farmers’ markets, CSAs, WIC, food pantries) that offer healthy foods; supplementing diets with healthy foods grown, preserved, or purchased locally; dollar value of vendor-reported sales or EBT, WIC, or Senior benefits redeemed at farmers’ markets; increased use of these foods to prepare meals.

Method: Self-report survey

Timeline:   Pre-post implementing curricula or program such as plate it up


Outcome:   Increased knowledge of ways to control stress   

Indicator:   Number of individuals participating in programs 

Method:   Survey

Timeline: Pre-post test


Outcome: Physical activity knowledge, skills, and competencies 

Indicator:   Number of individuals who reported: knowledge and skills gained about the benefits of physical activity; adoption of physical activity practices; increase in physical activity levels

Method: Self-report survey

Timeline:   Pre-post implementing curricula or program


Learning Opportunities:

Audience: Covington Housing Authority Youth
 Project or Activity: Nutrition/Cooking Enrichment Classes
 Content or Curriculum: 4-H and SNAP curriculum
 Inputs: Agents, volunteers
 Date: Summer/Fall 2021


 Audience: Kenton County Youth
 Project or Activity: Get Fit with 4-H
 Content or Curriculum: Get fit with 4-H
 Inputs: Agents, 4-H Assistants
 Date: September 2021 to May 2022


 Audience: Kenton County Youth
 Project or activity: Junior and Senior Culinary Challenge
 Content or Curriculum: 4-H Food Curriculum
 Inputs: Agents, volunteers, 4-H Assistants
 Date: July-September 2021


 Audience: Parents and Caregivers
 Activity: Developing a Mental Health Action Plan
 Content or Curriculum: UK publications and NAMI
 Inputs: FCS Agents, Mental Health professionals
 Date September 2021


 Audience: Hands on Food Preservation
 Activity: Workshop covering canning, freezing, drying
 Content or Curriculum: UK publications, USDA publications
 Inputs: FCS Agents
 Date: August 2021


 Audience: Seniors/Women and Men in Agriculture
 Activity: Fall Prevention on the Farm
 Content or Curriculum: UK publications
 Inputs: FCS and Agriculture Agent
 Date March 2021


 Audience: general public
 Activity: Addiction 101
 Content or Curriculum: UK curriculum
 Inputs: FCS Agents, Kenton County Alliance
 Date:  April 2022


 Audience: Senior Center participants
 Activity: Nutrition Education Lessons
 Content or Curriculum: UK publications
 Inputs: FCS Agents
 Date: July 2022 through June 2023

 
 Project or Activity: Food Preservation – 4-part Zoom series 
 Content or Curriculum: UK Publications and Trainings, FCS Agents 
 Inputs: FCS Agents, extension facilities, programmatic materials 
 Date: Available on Kenton YouTube channel all year


 Project or Activity: Food, nutrition, and safety news articles
 Content or Curriculum: UK exclusives, nutrition publications
 Inputs: FCS Agent developed
 Date: Weekly articles-rotate topics


 Project or Activity: Farmers’ Markets CES information booth
 Content or Curriculum: Plate It Up, FCS preparation and safety information, Victory Garden information 

Inputs: UK NEP and FCS specialists, Agent designed, SNAP incentives
 Date: July-October 2022


Project or Activity: SNAP program collaboration
 Content or Curriculum: UK SNAP
 Inputs: Kenton Program Funds
 Date: All year


 Project or Activity: Nutrition education programs
 Content or Curriculum: MyPlate, Plate It Up
 Inputs: SNAP Ed curriculum, Agent designed
 Date: Monthly beginning August 2022


 Project or Activity: Readyfests and Health Fairs
 Content or Curriculum: SNAP, MyPlate, Plate It Up
 Inputs: Agent designed, SNAP incentives
 Date: August 2022


 Project or Activity: Life Learning Center - Nutrition Education for Recovering Adults
 Content or Curriculum: SNAP curriculum, MyPlate
 Inputs: FCS Agent and center staff designed
 Date: Monthly beginning July 2022


Project or Activity: Baking/cooking YouTube videos
Content or Curriculum: UK fact sheets
 Inputs: local Kenton FCS staff designed and produced
 Date:  Summer 2022


Project or Activity – Area Homemaker Learning Seminar –Essential Ingredients-Baking Up Leadership
 Content – Superstar Chef, Home Baking Association, KEHA and KELD materials
 Inputs – Agent, area homemaker designed
 Date – Fall 2022


Audience: Diversion Participants as permitted by the CDW cohorts
Project or Activity: 4-H Bucket Garden
Content: 4-H Horticulture
Inputs: curriculum copies, materials, plants as available
May 2021 – August 2021


Audience:  Kenton County 4-H Youth
Project or Activity: Erlanger-Elsmere BFF Club
Content: 4-H Health/Mental Health
Inputs: Agent designed
 Date:  2021/2022


Audience:  Kenton County 4-H Youth
Project or Activity: Healthy Living and cooking Tichenor Middle School

Content:  4-H Health
Inputs:   Agent designed
Date:  2021/2022


Audience:   Kenton County 4-H Youth
Project or Activity: Adulting 101 Cooking Bartlett Alternative School
Content:   4-H Health
Inputs:   Agent designed
Date:  2021/2022


Audience: 4-H Youth
Project or Activity: Expressive Art
Content or Curriculum: National 4-H Art Curriculum
Inputs: Agents & assistants
Date: July 2021-June 2022




Success Stories

Teaching ADLs and IADLs with Teens and Adults diagnosed with Autism

Author: Ola Donahue

Major Program: Nutrition and Food Systems General

Research shows that daily living skills are extremely important for helping teens with autism become more independent adults. Indeed, adaptive skills may be more important than intelligence when it comes to predicting which teens will get a job or live on their own.Teens with Autism struggle with (ADLs) the more basic skills like personal hygiene, brushing teeth etc... They also struggle with (IADLs) which refers to more complex living task such as meal preparation and Laundry among other tasks

Full Story
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