Researcher examines effectiveness of community information sessions on childhood obesity policy

Nelda Mier, Ph.D.

Nelda Mier, Ph.D.

The effectiveness of community information sessions between researchers and local lawmakers to affect policy development related to childhood obesity was the focus of a recent study by a researcher at the Texas A&M Health Science Center (TAMHSC) School of Rural Public Health.

“Bridging Research and Policy to Address Childhood Obesity Among Border Hispanics” by Nelda Mier, Ph.D., associate professor of health promotion and community health sciences at the school’s McAllen campus, is among several in a collection of studies from Salud America! The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Network to Prevent Obesity Among Latino Children, published in a supplement to the March issue of the American Journal of Preventive Medicine. The supplement focuses on Salud America! achievements in the past five years and features 19 papers on effective approaches for preventing/controlling Latino childhood obesity.

“Mexican-American children are disproportionately affected by obesity compared to other population groups,” Dr. Mier said. “This study responds to a gap in the public health literature underlining the need for obesity-related research that is better aligned with policy and practice.”

Access to proper recreational facilities and increased dissemination of health education to families are essential for these children to meet national physical activity recommendations. This study emphasized the importance of communication between researchers and policymakers as the key to achieving those goals.

The study – consisting of public meetings, completed questionnaires and proposed policy recommendations that reflect the needs determined by the research – successfully defined four key strategies: establishing sustainable community-based health programs; improving neighborhood infrastructure and safety; increasing access to parks; and supporting community organizations to disseminate health education to parents and children.

Additional contributors to the study include Matthew Lee Smith, Ph.D., M.P.H., CHES; David Irizarry, B.S.; Genny Carrillo-Zuniga, M.D., M.P.H., Sc.D.; Chanam Lee, Ph.D.; Laura Trevino, M.E., M.P.H.; and Marcia G. Ory, Ph.D.

 

Dr. Sharkey to serve on expert working group on childhood obesity prevention

Joseph R. Sharkey, Ph.D.

Joseph R. Sharkey, Ph.D.

Joseph R. Sharkey, Ph.D., M.P.H., R.D., professor and founding director of the Program for Research in Nutrition and Health Disparities at the Texas A&M Health Science Center School of Rural Public Health, will serve on an expert working group for the Colorado Health Foundation on March 5-7 in Denver. Dr. Sharkey will join seven other invited panel members to assist the Colorado Health Foundation in discussing issues and beginning to develop recommendations to prevent childhood obesity.

 

College of Nursing receives grant to study childhood obesity in Brazos Valley

The Texas A&M Health Science Center (TAMHSC) College of Nursing recently received a community grant from the George Bush Presidential Library Foundation to study the childhood obesity epidemic throughout the Brazos Valley.

Alison Pittman

Alison Pittman, M.S.N., RN, CPN

Alison Pittman, M.S.N., RN, CPN, assistant professor at the TAMHSC-College of Nursing, is principal investigator of the one-year grant.

“The growing obesity epidemic of American children and the potential consequences of inactivity are well outlined in current research,” Pittman said. “What is harder to determine is why, despite the efforts of educational programs that encourage physical activity, some children choose not to participate in physical exercise as they grow into their middle school years.”

Pittman’s research project, Brazos Valley S.P.E.E.D. (Students Promoting Exercise and Excellent Diet), will examine the choices Brazos Valley middle school children make regarding physical exercise and determine the underlying causes for inactivity in these children.

A long-term study goal is to implement a three-component educational program for at-risk students at local middle schools. The program will include a mentorship aspect with TAMHSC-College of Nursing students, as well as physical activity and meal/snack preparation guidelines. The positive effects of mentorship, increased physical activity and dietary teaching will be studied as it relates to children’s exercise and nutrition habits over a two-year period.