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Making CHLI: Ingredients Ellen Zavisca Use of the Community Healthy Living Index as a Tool for Neighborhood Assessment and Community Engagement Overview

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Making CHLI: Ingredients

Ellen Zavisca

Use of the Community Healthy Living Index

as a Tool for Neighborhood Assessment

and Community Engagement

Overview

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Presentation overview

• What is CHLI

• Our experience with CHLI

• Lessons learned

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What is CHLI

• Developed by YMCA

• Recommended to Knox County by RWJF/Healthy Kids, Healthy Communities

• A qualitative tool for assessing physical activity and food environments

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What is CHLI

• 5 environmental assessment tools

o Afterschool child care site

o Neighborhood

o School

o Work site

o Community at large

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CHLI requirements

• Organized leadership

• A multi-disciplinary team

• Community volunteers

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Some CHLI questions

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Making CHLI: Taste Test

Marsha Spence,

Amber Dalton, Kristen Eppig,

Mona Habibi, Miranda Huston, Zixin Lou, Alviony Pangloli, Pratsani Srikan

The Pilot

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Pilot Assessment• Collaboration with:• The University of Tennessee, Knoxville

Department of Nutrition

Public Health Nutrition (PHN) Program

• Knox County Health Department

Healthy Kids, Healthy Communities

Robert Wood Johnson Foundation

• YMCA, Knoxville

Community Healthy Living Index

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Purpose of Project• Pilot the Community Healthy Living Index (CHLI)

for feasibility of use for Healthy Kids, Healthy Communities Project

• Perform a Nutrition & Physical Activity Environmental Audit of The University of Tennessee Neighborhood

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The Neighborhood

Zip code: 37916

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Participants• Participants were recruited by PHN graduate

students via:

– direct contact with peers & community members

– flyers distributed around campus

– emails

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Participant Meetings• Purpose:

– Explained CHLI & it’s purpose

– Reviewed consent form & confidentiality

– Assigned sectors & scheduled times to conduct audits

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CHLI• PHN students:

– completed the General Information section of CHLI using data from US Census & other Internet & Library Sources

– escorted participants through sectors of the community to complete the Programs, Physical Environment, Promotion, & Policy sections of the CHLI

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Results• Neighborhood Design

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Results• Environment Related to Physical Activity

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Results• Environment Related to Food & Nutrition

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Results• Safety

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Usability of CHLI

• Most participants reported CHLI was feasible & could help make positive changes in neighborhoods.

• It took most participants between 2-3 hours to complete sector audits.

• Participants need to be familiar with the neighborhood & the CHLI form to increase ease of completion.

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2007. 01

Recommendations • Distribute CHLI forms before scheduled audits

• Decide neighborhood perimeters beforehand– Give several maps & markers to each participant– Decide whether or not to access all areas of

neighborhoods (every road; every store/restaurant)

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Recommendations• Meet with participants before & after audits• Collect demographic information about

participants• Address concerns & clarify any areas of

confusion prior to completing audits• Take photographs of areas that are strengths or

barriers in the neighborhood

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Conclusions• CHLI:

– Successful tool to assess neighborhood nutrition & physical activity environments

– Capable of identifying barriers & strengths in neighborhoods

– May be used to plan programs & make changes in the neighborhood

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Making CHLI: Main Course

Ben Epperson

Process, Findings, Thoughts

How CHLI Worked for Us

The Project

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• National program of Robert Wood Johnson Foundation• Supporting Community Action to Prevent Childhood Obesity• Goal: Implement active living and healthy eating initiatives to reduce childhood obesity • Funding must be used to build and sustain systems, policies and environmental changes

HKHC

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Our Purpose• Address the needs of vulnerable populations

and communities• Identify and engage:

– populations at greatest risk for childhood obesity

– influential community members with experience and commitment to advancing active living and healthy eating

– Broad-based political support• Create something that can be replicated

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Our HKHC Partnership• East TN Children’s Hospital

– Childhood Obesity Coalition• Knoxville Regional Transportation Planning

Organization• Knox County Schools Coordinated School Health

Program• Fountain City Connections• Key faculty from UT-Knoxville:

– Center for Public Health– Obesity Research Center– Department of Nutrition

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“Target” Neighborhoods• Three neighborhoods in year one,

selected based on:– Prevalence rates of childhood obesity– Socioeconomic, policy, and

environmental factors– Assets and opportunities for success– A mixture of urban, rural and suburban

communities • Lonsdale, Inskip, Mascot

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Our Assessments• Key informant interviews• Focus groups• YMCA Activate America

Community Healthy Living Index:– Neighborhood assessment

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CHLI• Purpose

– Engage community members in a process of identifying environmental barriers and assets related to active living and healthy eating

– Identify priority issues at the neighborhood level

– Collect data that can ultimately be used to inform policy decisions at the systems level

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• Identify and convene community members and stakeholders

• Assign 5 assessment routes within each neighborhood

• Assist students/community members in scheduling assessment

• Be present at assessments• Facilitate discussion, planning and

implementation

HKHC Staff

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Community Members• Answer the assessment questions

based on instructions, direct observation and perception

• Participate in discussion, planning and implementation

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• Understand the CHLI Neighborhood Assessment tool

• Facilitate use of the tool by neighborhood/community stakeholders

• Accompany stakeholders on the assessment; assure consistent assessment process used; provide clarification, if needed; record responses

• Enter data• Provide report

MPH Student Role

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MPH Methodology

• Data Collection– Student designated walking route– 1-2 CHLI tools per audit– Student, HKHC staff, community

member– Additional participant comments

noted– Pics/Video taken by HKHC staff

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• Neighborhood Design– 1 well-maintained park and 1 Rec

center

but– Poor walkability– Few sidewalks, trails, greenways– Narrowness, uneven surfaces,

uncovered small utility holes

MPH Report Example

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• Safety (concern among community)– Large crime rate, prostitution, and

suspicions of gang activity – Poor lighting throughout neighborhood– High-traffic areas with high-speed

drivers– “City does not pay attention” to area– Substantial efforts to reduce loitering– Neighborhood Watch Association

MPH Report Example

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• Physical Activity Environment– Abundant green space…but much unused – Swimming pool (“very popular”), baseball

and soccer fields, tennis courts, and playground

– No basketball court, golf course, facilities open for walkers during off-hours, water or winter sport areas

– No street safety measures to support walking and biking

MPH Report Example

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MPH Report Example

• Community Engagement– Social Capitol split between two views

• Familiarity among long term residents

but• Public housing residents and new

immigrants viewed as outsiders• No known community organizations• Boy’s and Girls Club (fee)• After school program (fee)

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CHLI Next Steps

• Assessment results as a “Stage of Development”

• From Seeds to an Orchard:– Planting the Seeds– Nurturing for Growth– Nourishing the Roots– Cultivating Healthy Fruit– Harvesting the Rewards

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HKHC Next Steps

• Sociometrics

• Key Informants

• Group Visioning

• Prioritization

• MPC audit

• Community Action Teams

• Trainings

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Thoughts

• Strengths:– “Ground Truthing” tool– Engages community– Neighborhood crash course– Full assessment strengthens communication

• Weaknesses:– Lacks specificity– No community development model

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