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Formative Assessment of High Schools in Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease and Type 2 Diabetes

Formative Assessment of High Schools in Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease and Type 2 Diabetes. November 18, 2009 Signature Program for Child Health Research Amanda Harris, BS Mentor: Alberta Kong, MD, MPH Department of Pediatrics University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center.

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Formative Assessment of High Schools in Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease and Type 2 Diabetes

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  1. Formative Assessment of High Schools in Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease and Type 2 Diabetes November 18, 2009 Signature Program for Child Health Research Amanda Harris, BS Mentor: Alberta Kong, MD, MPH Department of Pediatrics University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center

  2. Objectives • To extend formative research for the development of a future school-wide prevention/intervention program for cardiovascular disease (CVD) and type 2 diabetes (T2DM) in a current NIH funded school-based health center study that helps adolescents decrease their risk for metabolic syndrome. • To collect formative research data on intrapersonal, interpersonal, institutional, community, and policy level mechanisms that may be created in high schools to support students in improving nutrition and physical activity.

  3. Methods

  4. Methods Continued

  5. Parent & Student Interview Results Key themes identified: • Lack of healthy food options “…everywhere you go they sell pizza and like burritos, breakfast burritos and sometimes even regular burritos at lunch. Even if they change the menu up a bit that’d be better because it wouldn’t be the same thing everyday just burritos, burritos, or pizza, pizza, pizza.” (Student) • Infrequent curricular/extracurricular physical activity opportunities “There’s of course extracurricular activities like baseball and football and all that and then the PE but if the kid doesn’t want to join them then it’s not going to do any good for that kid… a gym class throughout their entire years in school, maybe that would be an idea.” (Parent) • Inadequate exposure to health/nutritional information through classroom experiences

  6. Preliminary Survey Results Areas receiving strong support from 23 completed surveys to date: • Marketing campaign to promote nutritious snacks and food choices • After-school program for students, parents, and school staff to engage in non-competitive physical activity aimed at fun, recreation, and lifelong healthy living • Yearly taste tests of healthy foods that reflect the variety of religions and cultures that make up the school community • Community activities to encourage students and their parents to be more physically active

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