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Effectiveness of the URI Senior Nutrition Awareness Project (SNAP) Nutrition Education Programs with Older Rhode Islanders Brittany Loriquet Faculty Sponsor: Nancy Fey-Yensan Department of Nutrition and Food Sciences
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SNAP Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program – Helps low-income people purchase the food they need 35 million people – SNAP-Ed Helps families and individuals make healthy eating and active lifestyle choices Senior Nutrition Awareness Project
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SNAP-Ed Monthly newsletters – Nutrition to Go Monthly nutrition programs at low-income senior centers and housing sites in RI – Recipe sample – Interactive activities Toll free line
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Nutrition to Go
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Nutrition To Go
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Programs Monthly nutrition topic – Recipe of the month sample – Interactive activity – Exercise Keep record of all members – Know SNAP participants Written evaluation
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Evaluations December: Healthy Holiday Goodies January: The New My Pyramid
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Evaluations February: Breakfast Matters March: Digest Your Best!
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Evaluations October: Dining Out Healthy January: The New MyPyramid March: Digest Your Best! April: Farmers’ Markets
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Analysis of April Evaluation Did you make healthy choices when dining out? Did you eat foods from a variety of food groups?
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Analysis Did you increase your intake of fiber, water, or amount of activity? If yes, did you increase fiber? If yes, did you drink plenty of fluids?
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Analysis If yes, did you increase your physical activity? After today’s lesson, will you plan on attending farmers’ markets?
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Results – Dining Out Healthier Pre-test (October 2010): – 89.8% of participants stated they would try to make healthier choices when dining out 1 month Post-test (November 2010): – 89.7% of participants did make healthier choices Most common behavior changes: chose a vegetable, salad, or baked potato as a side (78.7%) and limited additional salt (75.7%) 6 month Post-test (April 2011): – 78.4% of participants reported making healthier choices
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Results – The New MyPyramid Pre-test (January 2011): – 89.4% of participants said they would try to eat a variety of foods from different food groups 1 month Post-test (February 2011): – 84.6% of participants did eat a variety of foods Most common food groups: fruit (78.1%) and vegetables (75.0%) 3 month Post-test (April 2011): – 87.9% of participants reported eating from a variety of food groups
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Results – Digest Your Best Pre-test (March 2011): – 86.9% of participants stated they would try to increase their intake of fiber, water, and/or amount of physical activity 1 month Post-test (April 2011): – 83.8% of participants responded they did increase their intake/amount in at least one of these three areas Most common behavior changes: drank plenty of fluids (83.2%) and increased fiber intake (61.1%)
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Impact by Senior Center Sort data by location of program Where is the most benefit Best approach
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Limitations Self-reported Literacy of participants Attendance Misinterpretation
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Implications & Conclusions Programs have profound effects on participants Free community nutrition education programs are a necessity for all underserved populations – SNAP-Ed is the only such program Oppose funding cuts
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Questions? Thank You!
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