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ASTPHND State Teleconference Healthy Weight Indicator Report Card June 1, 2010

State Indicator Report on Healthy Weight for Youth United States, 2010. Obesity Prevention and Control Branch Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity & Obesity NCCDPHP, CDC. ASTPHND State Teleconference Healthy Weight Indicator Report Card June 1, 2010

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ASTPHND State Teleconference Healthy Weight Indicator Report Card June 1, 2010

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  1. State Indicator Report on Healthy Weight for Youth United States, 2010 Obesity Prevention and Control Branch Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity & Obesity NCCDPHP, CDC ASTPHND State TeleconferenceHealthy Weight Indicator Report Card June 1, 2010 This information is distributed solely for the purpose of pre dissemination public comment under applicable information quality guidelines. It has not been formally disseminated by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It does not represent and should not be construed to represent any agency determination or policy.

  2. State Indicator Report on Healthy Weight for Youth Contributors

  3. State Indicator Report on Healthy Weight for Youth • General overview • Draft outcome indicators • Draft environmental and policy indicators • Next steps

  4. Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity and Obesity • Primary Target Areas • Physical Activity, Fruit & Vegetable, Breastfeeding • Sugar Sweetened Beverages • Television Viewing • Energy Density • Environment and Policy

  5. Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity and Obesity • Primary Target Areas • Physical Activity, Fruit & Vegetable, Breastfeeding • Sugar Sweetened Beverages • Television Viewing • Energy Density • Environment and Policy

  6. State Indicator Report on Healthy Weight for Youth • Draft Outcome Indicators • Children Healthy Weight Prevalence • Soft Drink Consumption • Television/Screen Time • Draft Environmental and Policy Indicators

  7. Comprehensive Approach for Preventing and Addressing Childhood Obesity (IOM, 2007)

  8. State Indicator Report on Healthy Weight for Youth • Draft Environmental and Policy Indicators • School Environment and Policy • Home Environment • Childcare Environment and Policy

  9. School Environment and Policy School Competitive Food Environment School Neighborhood Retail Environment School Physical Activity Availability and Participation State Indicator Report on Healthy Weight for Youth

  10. Home Environment Television in Bedroom Meals Eaten with Family State Indicator Report on Healthy Weight for Youth

  11. Childcare Environment and Policy Childcare Nutrition and Physical Activity Regulations State Indicator Report on Healthy Weight for Youth

  12. State Indicator Report on Healthy Weight for Youth • Other Reports • “F as in Fat 2009” Robert Wood Johnson Report http://healthyamericans.org/reports/obesity2009/ • “Child Obesity State Report Cards” - National Survey of Children’s Health http://nschdata.org/Content/07ObesityReportCards.aspx • “State Fact Sheets” – Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System and School Health Profiles http://www.cdc.gov/HealthyYouth/obesity/facts.htm

  13. State Indicator Report on Healthy Weight for Youth • How is this report different? • More in-depth focus on youth: early childhood through adolescence • Home environment • Soft drink consumption and availability in schools/on campus • Retail food environment

  14. State Indicator Report on Healthy Weight for Youth • Healthy Weight Report indicators can be used to: • Monitor progress and celebrate state successes. • Identify opportunities for growth and improvement in environmental and policy supports that make promoting healthy weight more feasible at the state level. • Report to be released regularly

  15. State Indicator Report on Healthy Weight for Youth • Criteria for Inclusion: • Highlighted in multiple expert recommendations and reports: e.g., IOM, DNPAO Guidance Documents • Data measurable, available for most states • Data available from reputable sources: .gov, .org, .edu; transparent methodology in obtaining information

  16. State Indicator Report on Healthy Weight for Youth Things to consider during today’s call: • Indicator • Is it the right concept? • Data source • Additional sources meeting inclusion criteria? • Metric • Is this a helpful way to represent the data? • Usefulness and feasibility in your state

  17. State Indicator Report on Healthy Weight for Youth Draft Outcome Indicators

  18. Healthy WeightOutcome Indicators *Data shown are from 2008 PedNSS; estimates represent prevalence of underweight and healthy weight and are for illustration only ┼ Data not available

  19. Healthy WeightOutcome Indicators *Data shown are from 2007 NSCH; estimates represent prevalence of underweight and healthy weight and are for illustration only

  20. Healthy WeightOutcome Indicators *Data shown are from 2005 or 2007 YRBSS; estimates are for illustration only and do not account for underweight prevalence ┼ Data not available

  21. Sugar Sweetened BeverageOutcome Indicators *Data currently not available

  22. TelevisionOutcome Indicators

  23. TelevisionOutcome Indicators *Data shown are from 2007 NSCH; estimates indicate % of children 6-17 meeting AAP recommendations and are for illustration only

  24. TelevisionOutcome Indicators *Data shown are from 2005 or 2007 YRBS; estimates reflect % of middle and high school students watching 3 hours or less of television each day and are for illustration only ┼ Data not available

  25. TelevisionOutcome Indicators *Data shown are from 2005 or 2007 YRBS; estimates reflect % of middle and high school students watching 3 hours or less of television each day and are for illustration only ┼ Data not available

  26. State Indicator Report on Healthy Weight for Youth Draft Environmental and Policy Indicators

  27. School Environment and Policy *Estimates reflect % of middle and high schools where soda and fruit drinks (not 100% juice) were not available and are for illustration only; sports drinks are not included in this calculation ┼ Data not available

  28. School Environment and Policy *Estimates reflect % of middle and high schools where candy or salty snacks were not available, and are for illustration only ┼ Data not available

  29. School Environment and Policy Question Is this a useful and meaningful indicator? Data compilation in process

  30. School Environment and Policy

  31. School Environment and Policy Question Is this a useful and meaningful indicator? Data compilation in process

  32. Home Environment *Estimates indicate % of children 6-17 eating meals together every day during week preceding survey and are for illustration only

  33. Home Environment

  34. Childcare Environment and Policy

  35. Childcare Environment and Policy

  36. Childcare Environment and Policy

  37. Childcare Environment and Policy

  38. State Indicator Report on Healthy Weight for Youth • MAPPS Focal Areas to Consider • Access (e.g., neighborhood retail environment) • Price (e.g., school competitive food environment) • Social support (e.g., family meals) • Media • Point of decision information

  39. State Indicator Report on Healthy Weight for Youth • Next Steps • Post-call feedback from you • Additional Indicators? • Addressing Disparities? • Errors and Omissions? • General Comments?

  40. Send comments to: healthyweightreport@cdc.gov by June 23rd This information is distributed solely for the purpose of pre dissemination public comment under applicable information quality guidelines. It has not been formally disseminated by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It does not represent and should not be construed to represent any agency determination or policy. State Indicator Report on Healthy Weight for Youth

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