Making Healthy Lifestyle Choices
FCS - Making Healthy Lifesyle Choices
Rex, Thompson
Making Healthy Lifestyle Choices (general)
Mastering Food Choices
Fit Blue/Get Moving KY
The obesity epidemic threatens the quality and years of life of Kentuckians. Obese individuals are at increased risk for many chronic health conditions, including type 2 diabetes, heart disease, stroke, and some types of cancers. The obesity rate in Kentucky increased 90 percent over the last 15 years. Thirty percent of individuals in the Commonwealth report no leisure-time physical activity. Increased consumption of unhealthy food, stress, and built environments that promote physical inactivity are largely responsible for the obesity epidemic. As a result, Kentuckians are dying from heart disease and cancer at higher rates than all Americans and they have a lower life expectancy, 75.5 years, compared to 78 years for Americans. Minorities and individuals residing in Appalachia bear a heavier brunt of the obesity and chronic disease burden. The goal of the Making Healthy Lifestyle Choices Initiative is to reverse these trends by working with various organizations, agencies, and groups to promote the health and wellness in all Kentuckians.
*A decrease in the number of obese and overweight children, youth, adults and elderly
*Increase in the practice and promotion of physical activity and healthy eating daily
*Improvement in the built environment to promote physical activity and healthy eating
*Improvement in the mental health and wellbeing of Kentuckians
*Manage and prevent the risk, debilitation, and premature death related to diabetes, cancer, heart disease, stroke and hypertension
*Increase the estimated health savings in dollars for chronic disease
INTERMEDIATE OUTCOMES:
*Practice healthy food choices and strengthen individuals’ ability to build healthy eating plans and patterns
*Maintain appropriate calorie balance during each stage of life: childhood, adolescence, adulthood, pregnancy and breastfeeding and older age
*Practice of physical activity in families and communities and decreased time spent on sedentary behaviors
*Changes related to obesity, physical and healthy eating
*Strengthen community coalitions or partnerships to address obesity, physical inactivity and chronic disease
*Practice healthy lifestyle decision-making that strengthen individual’s ability to cope with normal life stressors
Changes in awareness, knowledge, opinions, skills, and attitudes needed to make informed choices regarding:
*Healthy lifestyle choices
*Childhood and youth obesity
*Adult weight management
*Healthy aging
*Practice and promotion of daily physical activity
*Reduction of chronic disease
Long-Term Outcome: Follow-up evaluations will be mailed to past participants.
Indicator: Documentation or testimonies will be given by the participants that will prove that behavior has changed as a result of the program.
Method: 0ne, two, three, four, etc. evaluations will be given to discover behavior change.
Timeline: One, two, three, four, etc. year evaluations will be administered. Statistics will be studied and submitted to the Campbell County Extension by professional collaborators/agencies/services that will prove social, economic or environmental change has taken place.
Intermediate Outcome: Follow-up evaluations will be sent to participants.
Indicator: A follow-up written evaluation will be mailed to each participant to determine if he/she is practicing what was learned or demonstrated at the program. Participants will answer the evaluation in a manner that will show that participants are now practicing what was learned or demonstrated in the program.
Method: A three, four or six month follow-up evaluation will be mailed out. Teachers and parents will also be asked questions to determine if children are practicing what they learned in the program.
Timeline: A three, four or six month evaluation will be mailed to participants.
Initial Outcome: End of program evaluations will be utilized
Indicator: Written evaluations will be completed by each participant/student at the end of each program. Hands-on evaluations will also be used to evaluate the progress of the participants/students. Participants will answer questions about the program/subject matter that will show that he/she has learned from the class/program.
Method: Written evaluations and hands-on evaluations will be utilized.
Timeline: End of classes/programs.
Audience: Audience: Pre-schoolers
Project or Activity: LEAP
Content or Curriculum: LEAP Curriculum from U.K.
Inputs: Community and faith-based organizations, daycares and schools
Date: Monthly
Audience: Children 6-8 years of age and their parents, grandparents or guardian
Project or Activity: Mommy & Me in the Garden and KitchenContent or Curriculum: Making Healthy Lifestyle Choices, Family Meal time, Plate It Up and NEP recipes
Inputs: UK Cooperative Extension FCS Agent, Horticulture Assistant and Agent
Date: The 4th Thursday of every month February-September
Audience: Adults 65 years old and above
Project or Activity: Matter of Balance
Content or Curriculum: Matter of Balance Curriculum
Inputs: Campbell County Cooperative Extension Service, Physical Therapist
Date: meets weekly for 8 week series, Summer 2019
Audience: Campbell County Diabetes Support Group
Project or Activity: Making Healthy Lifestyle Choices with Diabetes Support GroupContent or Curriculum: Taking ownership of your diabetes, SNAP recipes, Plate It Up! Recipes, Making Healthy Lifestyle Choices, Family Mealtime curriculum
Inputs: UK Cooperative Extension Service FCS Agents, the Campbell County Diabetes Support Group and the Campbell County Senior Citizen Center and Northern Kentucky Health Department
Date: Second Thursday of every month throughout the year
Audience: Hosea House Soup Kitchen
Project or Activity: Making Healthy Choices with Hosea House
Content or Curriculum: Making Healthy Lifestyle Choices, Taking Ownership of Your Diabetes, SNAP recipes and Plate It Up!
Inputs: UK Cooperative Extension Service FCS Agent, Hosea HouseDate: Hosea House - Last Monday of every month throughout the year
Audience: Potential 12,600 Campbell County Media Central Viewers
Project or Activity: Making Healthy Lifestyle Choices on CC Media Central
Content or Curriculum: Making Healthy Lifestyle Choices, Family Meal timeInputs: UK Cooperative Extension FCS Agent and Campbell County Media Central
Date: April 4, June 19, August 2, October 4, and December 6, 2019
Audience: Food Stamp Participants at the Food Stamp Office
Project or Activity: Making Healthy Choices with SNAP Participants
Content or Curriculum: Making Healthy Lifestyle Choices, Family Meal time
Inputs: UK Cooperative Extension FCS Agent and Department for Community Based Services (DCBS)
Date: A new display each month throughout the year
Audience: Pre-schoolers
Project or Activity: Flowerbuds
Content or Curriculum: LEAP Curriculum from U.K., UK publications in FCS and Horticulture
Inputs: Campbell County Extension Horticulture and FCS areas
Date: Monthly
Audience: Pre-schoolers
Project or Activity: Stories, Songs, and Stretches
Content or Curriculum: Stories, Songs, and Stretches curriculum, Leap books, other physical activity kid booksInputs: Campbell County FCS Extension Agent
Date: June, July, and August
Audience: Campbell County Recorder Readers (17,000)
Project or Activity: FCS News Article
Content or Curriculum: Making Healthy Lifestyle ChoicesInputs: UK Cooperative Extension FCS Agents and Campbell County Community Recorder Newspaper
Date: Monthly news articles throughout the year
Audience: St. John’s Lutheran Church Food Pantry Participants
Project or Activity: SNAP Education for St. John’s Food Pantry
Content or Curriculum: NEP and SNAP Curriculum and recipes, Food Preparation, Accessing Nutritious Foods
Inputs: UK Cooperative Extension FCS Agents and St. John’s Lutheran Church and USDADate: Every 2nd Monday bimonthly throughout the year
Author: Ronda Rex
Major Program: Mastering Food Choices
Campbell County adult residents face health challenges due to overweight (58%) and obesity (31%) with 8% of the adults being diagnosed with diabetes (kentuckyhealthfacts.org). According to the Kentucky Public Health 2019 Kentucky Diabetes Fact Sheet, “diabetes is a public health epidemic and can be associated with complications such as: heart disease, stroke, blindness, kidney failure, lower-limb amputation and ketoacidosis. These can reduce length and quality of life.&rd