SNAP EdPlan of Work

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Clay County CES

Title:
SNAP Ed
MAP:
SNAP Ed
Agents Involved:
Lora Lee Frazier Howard, Alissa Ackerman, Jeff Casada, Connie Downey
MAJOR PROGRAM 1:
Food Preparation
Situation:

Clay County is a small rural county in Eastern Kentucky, 10% of our population is 18-24 years old, 57% is 25-64 years of age and 12% is over 65 % years of age. Our medium household income is 23,445. According to 2014 statistics 43% of our county is obese with 18% of our adults being diagnosed with diabetes, and 33% of the adults don’t meet the standard activity level. Lifestyle choices impact the quality and years of life. 29% of our head of households are 65 or older, 66.4% of our households are husband wife with their own children, 33.6 % of our households are single parent with children under 18, 42% of our population is living below the poverty level. 11.9% is our unemployment rate. We have 4409 food stamp cases with average benefits of 227. 00 per month,


SNAP-Education programs help limited resource families increase access to affordable nutritious food, stretch food dollars, develop food preparation skills and improve food safety practices. SNAP-Education efforts also help communities address nutrition and obesity prevention issues related to the social, environmental, and policy work which supports limited resource individuals in making healthy lifestyle changes.

Long-Term Outcomes:

Individuals will reduce their risk for nutrition-related health problems, maintain a healthy weight, prepare meals at home 5 or more times a week. Fewer foodborne illnesses will be reported by healthcare providers, instance of food insecurity will decline in the community, increase food availability by accessing additional healthy foods via community systems and personal productivity.

Intermediate Outcomes:

Individuals will adopt one recommendation from the dietary guidelines, demonstrate food preparation skills, engage in good food safety practices, adopt one food resource management practice, engage in regular physical activity, utilize community support systems (farmers market, community gardens, WIC, food pantry, etc.) that provide access to healthy foods, will grow, care for, produce and preserve foods from personal gardens and orchards to gain access to healthy foods.

Initial Outcomes:

Individuals will be able to identify the components of a healthy diet as defined by the Dietary Guidelines for Americans, will gain knowledge on food preparation techniques, food safety practices , identify food resource management practices, on the importance of physical activity as part of a healthy lifestyle, skills and knowledge grow their own garden and/or orchard.


Individuals will locate community support systems (farmers market, WIC, food pantry, etc.) that provide access to healthy foods.

Evaluation:

Long-term Outcome: Individuals will reduce their risk for nutrition-related health problems. maintain a healthy weight, prepare meals at home 5 or more times a week, have improved food security, will increase consumption of fruits and vegetables through home gardens and orchards.

Indicator: Individuals will report reduced nutrition-related health problems as a result of making healthy eating. Choices increasing physical activity, report preparing meals 5 or more times a day, increase yields of produce grown. Quantity of food preserved

Method: Pre/Post written evaluation. Word of mouth, NEERS Report, Change in health/disease data from Kentucky County Healthcare Profile Data (CEDIK).

Timeline: 2016-2020



Intermediate Outcome: Individuals will adopt one recommendation from the dietary guidelines for the purpose of improving their diet, demonstrate food preparation skills, engage in good food safety practices, adopt one food resource management practice, engage in regular physical activity, grow, care for, produce and preserve foods from personal gardens and orchards to gain access to healthy foods, reporting growing, producing, and preserving fruits and vegetables,

Indicator: Number of individuals who reported adopting healthy food practices related to food preparation, storage, handling, increasing physical activity.

Method: Pre/Post written evaluation, garden survey, Web-NEERS reports.

Timeline: 2016-2020


Initial Outcome: Individuals will gain knowledge to identify the components of a healthy diet, to identify food preparation techniques, to describe food safety practices, to identify food resource management practices, to recognize the importance of physical activity as part of a healthy lifestyle, to grow their own garden and/or orchard.

Indicator: Number of individuals reporting an increase in knowledge related to the components of a healthy diet, identifying food preparation techniques, describing food safety practices, identify resource management practice, identifying the importance of physical activity, and growing their own garden or orchard.

Method: Pre/Post written evaluation. Web-NEERS reports, garden survey, word of mouth.

Timeline: 2016-2020



Learning Opportunities:

Audience:SNAP ED Families/ Adults

Project: or Activity: SNAP Ed curriculum 

Content or Curriculum:  SNAP Ed curriculum,

Inputs: SNAP Ed Assistant, Faith and community Partnerships, Food Pantry, Nutrition Billboard Campaign, Chop Chop, Community Events, NEP Calendar Distribution, Healthy Choices  

Date 2019-2020


Audience: Youth 

Project or Activity: LEAP, Super Star Chef, Team Nutrition Discover My Plate, Professor Popcorn, Fun with Foods, Yummy

Content or Curriculum: LEAP, Super Star Chef, Discover My Plate, Professor Popcorn, Yummy 

Inputs: SNAP Ed Assistant, 4-H Agent

Date 2019-2020


Audience: Adults, Families

Project or Activity: Plate It Up

Content or Curriculum:  Plate It Up Recipes

Inputs: all agents

Date 2019-2020


Audience: Adults, Families

Project or Activity: Food Preservation, Weight the Reality Series Curriculum, Taking Ownership of Your Diabetes, Get Moving Manchester

Content or Curriculum:  Food Preservation, Get Moving Manchester curriculum

Inputs:  FCS Agent

Date 2019-2020

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