Using the Community Assessment for Public Health Emergency Response (CASPER) to assess barriers to healthy eating and active living in a low-income community

•Community Assessment for Public Health Emergency Response (CASPER) is useful.•The method is useful for geographically-defined communities to assess healthy living.•This method builds academic-practice-community partnership in low-income areas. Insufficient physical activity and unhealthy eating beh...

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Veröffentlicht in:Evaluation and program planning 2016-12, Vol.59, p.41-46
Hauptverfasser: Ylitalo, Kelly R., Umstattd Meyer, M.Renée, Stone, Kahler, Doyle, Eva I., Curtis, Ramona
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container_end_page 46
container_issue
container_start_page 41
container_title Evaluation and program planning
container_volume 59
creator Ylitalo, Kelly R.
Umstattd Meyer, M.Renée
Stone, Kahler
Doyle, Eva I.
Curtis, Ramona
description •Community Assessment for Public Health Emergency Response (CASPER) is useful.•The method is useful for geographically-defined communities to assess healthy living.•This method builds academic-practice-community partnership in low-income areas. Insufficient physical activity and unhealthy eating behaviors are major contributors to the obesity epidemic in the United States. Identifying health behaviors and disparities in underserved communities is needed to guide the development of targeted interventions. The Community Assessment for Public Health Emergency Response (CASPER) is a set of tools designed for public health emergencies, but the utility of CASPER in non-emergency settings has not been explored. The purpose of this study was to use CASPER to obtain information on household-based behaviors of and barriers to fruit/vegetable consumption and physical activity, and explore the utility of these methods for future health assessments. Cross-sectional survey data included households (n=100) in a low-income neighborhood. Half of adults did not meet recommendations for fruit/vegetable consumption and 20% reported no physical activity during the previous week. Cost was significantly associated with healthy eating and physical activity in our community. Four primary advantages of using CASPER methodology included a user-friendly CDC toolkit, yield of a representative community sample with a relatively low sample size, low-cost/low-tech requirements for implementation, and the strengthening of an academic-practice-community partnership. Our work demonstrates the utility of CASPER for assessing healthy living in a geographically-defined community where household health behaviors and barriers are unknown.
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Cost was significantly associated with healthy eating and physical activity in our community. Four primary advantages of using CASPER methodology included a user-friendly CDC toolkit, yield of a representative community sample with a relatively low sample size, low-cost/low-tech requirements for implementation, and the strengthening of an academic-practice-community partnership. 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Cost was significantly associated with healthy eating and physical activity in our community. Four primary advantages of using CASPER methodology included a user-friendly CDC toolkit, yield of a representative community sample with a relatively low sample size, low-cost/low-tech requirements for implementation, and the strengthening of an academic-practice-community partnership. 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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); MEDLINE; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Activities
Adolescent
Adult
Barriers
Child
Child, Preschool
Community
Community assessment for public health emergency response
Community Relations
Consumption
Cross-Sectional Studies
Eating behavior
Eating Habits
Exercise
Female
Fruit
Health Behavior
Health disparities
Health education
Health promotion
Healthy Diet - economics
Healthy Diet - psychology
Healthy eating
Healthy food
Healthy habits
Households
Humans
Low Income
Low income groups
Male
Middle Aged
Neighborhoods
Obesity
Physical activity
Poverty
Public health
Residence Characteristics
Socioeconomic Factors
Surveys and Questionnaires - utilization
Underserved populations
United States
Young Adult
title Using the Community Assessment for Public Health Emergency Response (CASPER) to assess barriers to healthy eating and active living in a low-income community
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