Title: Active for Life
1Active for Life
2The Programs
Active Choices Stanford University Telephone-bas
ed physical activity counseling Active Living
Every Day Cooper Institute Human
Kinetics Group-based lifestyle physical activity
program
3Behavior Change Strategies
- Goal setting
- Identification of barriers
- Tracking of behaviors
- Active problem solving
- Supportive feedback
4Active for Life Program Background
- Each site chose one of the two evidence-based
physical activity intervention programs - Introduced the program into existing community
structures
- Nine community grantees (12 geographical areas)
5(No Transcript)
6Active for Life Program Background(cont.)
- Purpose was to increase physical activity among
sedentary midlife and older adults - Evaluation demonstrated community participant
results of similar magnitude as in research
setting
7Accomplishments
- Community-based activity programs can
- Recruit retain diverse older adults
- Increase physical activity
- Decrease stress depression
- Satisfy participants
- Wilcox et. Al., AJPH 2006
8- Anecdotally clinically significant improvements
in health and health care costs - Wilcox et. Al., AJPH 2006
9Active For Life GenerationsWorking Together to
Prevent Childhood Obesity
-
-
- funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and
administered by the Active for Life National
Program Office at Texas AM Health Science Center
School of Rural Public Health
10RWJF Cross-cutting Tactics
- Build on existing programs synergy projects
- Develop criteria to help establish priorities
- Leverage opportunities for evaluation
- Develop an evaluation framework and consider
possibility of common outcome measures - Leverage opportunities for RWJF communications
work and message platform - Common models
- Strong community-based partnerships engage
leaders and decision-makers
11Intergenerational Grant Project - Generations
- Goal To halt the rise of childhood obesity rates
- How Promoting physical activity and healthy
eating in schools and communities by changing
policies and environments
- particularly among low-income children and their
families
12Intergenerational Grant Project - Generations
- Four Active for Life Grantee sites selected and
given 45,000 to implement locally-designed
project - 18 month project promoting physical activity and
healthy eating
13Generations Approach
- Aimed at prevention or reduction
- of childhood obesity
- Involved older adults helping
- younger children and their families
- Included promotion of physical
- activity and healthy eating
- Utilized the 5P strategic
- planning work plan
-
145 P Work Plan
Each grantee created a strategic work plan,
complete with goals, activities, and benchmarks,
addressing each of the 5Ps
15Projects
- Active Generations
- (The Oasis Institute/San Antonio, TX)
- FirstGarden
- (FirstHealth of the Carolinas, Pinehurst, NC)
- San Pablo Park Steps to Health
- (City of Berkeley, CA)
- School Health Advisory Council
- (Hamilton County General Health District,
Cincinnati, OH) -
16FirstGarden FirstHealth of the Carolinas
- Developed 5,600 square foot organic garden next
to low-income housing - Partnered with the Master Gardeners to provide
mentoring to children from the Boys Girls Club
and town summer program
17FirstGardenFirstHealth of the Carolinas
- Hosted cooking classes developed recipes using
the produce brought home by the children from
FirstGarden - Expanded the local farmers market to the
hospital campus
18FirstGardenFirstHealth of the Carolinas
- Expanding gardens in three elementary schools and
an adult community garden - Creating a tool-kit for dissemination of organic
community gardens in North Carolina
19Active Generations The OASIS Institute
- Implemented evidence-based eight week program
(CATCH) in two Learning Tree after school program
sites - Coordinated Walkabout and walkability assessment
with children and older adults
20Active GenerationsThe OASIS Institute
- Instituted partnership with the Metropolitan
Planning Organization - Resulted in environmental changes to improve
safety and access to physical activity
21Active GenerationsThe OASIS Institute
- Trained 100 Learning Tree staff to implement
CATCH program across all sites - Increased access to healthy snacks at the
Learning Tree after school programs - Engaged families in grocery store scavenger
hunt to improve shopping skills for high nutrient
food choices
22San Pablo Park Steps to HealthCity of Berkeley
- Worked with local food vendors to provide
affordable, healthy take-out dinners for sale
each week - Installed a Dance Dance Revolution machine in the
Recreation Center
23San Pablo Park Steps to HealthCity of Berkeley
- Developed tennis nutritious cooking classes
- Collaborated with Farm Fresh Choice to provide
produce to buy at the Recreation Center
- Established senior-youth summer physical
activities
24School Health Advisory CouncilHamilton County
Gen. Health Dist.
- Developed a School Health Advisory Council (SHAC)
in the Mt. Healthy School District - Adopted district-wide Wellness Policy
- Delivered girls!CAN after school physical
activity program
25School Health Advisory CouncilHamilton County
Gen. Health Dist.
- Expanded healthy food choices for students and
staff - Conducted parent and teacher focus groups
26School Health Advisory CouncilHamilton County
Gen. Health Dist.
- Creating an on-line tool-kit for dissemination
and expanding the school health advisory process
to two new districts
27Lessons Learned
- Find and involve the right partners in planning
and implementation - Develop working relationships
- Focus on communitys assets and resources
- Efforts are effective and/or viewed as effective
-
28Lessons Learned (cont)
- Follow your workplan yet
- remain open to evolving opportunities
- Identify benchmarks
- (success)
- Tap right adults for the
- right activity/involvement
- Design evaluation process
- Tell your story
29 Challenges
- Parents resistence to making changes
- Conflicting schedules of seniors/adults and
youth - Potential issue of transportation
- School operational culture
30 Next Steps
- More in-depth evaluation
- Continue to build helpful relationships
- Identify new partners who can enhance potential
of sustainingthink outside the box - Train-the-trainer potentials
31 Putting the pieces together to prevent
childhood obesity
32- It is worth the challenge!