HEALTHY COMMUNITIES STUDY |
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Healthy Communities Study - Glossary of Terms |
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Activity |
Activities are actions or inputs that are facilitated by or occur within the community or system and related to its goals and objectives |
ASA24 |
The National Cancer Institute (NCI) Automated Self-Administered 24 hour Recall (ASA24) is a software tool that enables automated and self-administered 24-hour dietary recalls. The format and design of ASA24 are based on a modified version of the interviewer-administered Automated Multiple Pass Method (AMPM) 24-hour recall developed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). The ASA24 must be accessed via high-speed internet . For the HCS the EMSI field interviewer will administer the dietary recall because experience to date suggests that higher response and completion rates are obtained with children if the instrument is interviewer-administered. |
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BMI trajectory |
A time series of BMI measurements collected on the same child based on combining direct assessments from within home data collection with information abstracted from the medical record |
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COCOMO |
The strategies and measures from the Common Community Measures for Obesity Prevention project supported by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the Kellogg Foundation, Kaiser Permanente, and the CDC Foundation. Also referred to as the "Measures Project." A complete listing of these strategies and measures are available at: http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/rr5807a1.htm. |
Community |
Any group sharing a common place, experience, or interest. Operationally defined for the HCS as a public high school catchment area. |
Community Documenter |
Individual who lives in the RIPA community (ideally one of the key informants) and is hired by Battelle to prospectively track the progression of obesity programs and policies in their community. |
Community Liaison |
Battelle employee who travels from community to community to conduct outreach and interview key informants, train EMSI staff to conduct home visits, perform quality control by observing home visits, and perform environmental observations within the communities. |
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E |
Enhanced Protocol |
More detailed measures collected of children (e.g., dietary recall) and communities. A randomly selected subsample of 1 in 6 (approximately 17%) children will receive the Enhanced Protocol. |
Ethnicity |
A group of people whose members identify with each other, through a common heritage, often consisting of a common language, a common culture (often including a shared religion) and an ideology that stresses common ancestry |
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I |
Intensity Score |
The main independent predictor variables within the HCS that capture the intensity of program or policy implementation within a community by summarizing information collected via the key informant interviews, review of documents, and/or data compiled by the local community documenter. |
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K |
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M |
MAPPS Strategies |
Refers to a set of intervention strategies identified by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to promote engagement in physical activity and healthy eating. MAPPS is an acronym for the actual strategies: Media, Access, Point of Decision Information, Price, and Social Support & Services. • Use
Media to promote healthy foods/drinks and increase activity;
restrict advertising and employ counter-advertising for tobacco
and unhealthy foods/drinks. http://www.cdc.gov/chronicdisease/recovery/PDF/N_and_PA_MAPPS_strategies.pdf http://www.cdc.gov/CommunitiesPuttingPreventiontoWork/strategies/index.htm
These are the recommended strategies for the "Communities Putting Prevention to Work" program. |
Mediator |
A mediating variable is one that explains the mechanism by which an independent variable affects a dependent variable. Mediating variables, or mediators, are in the causal pathway between an independent and dependent variable. Examples in HCS include availability and access to healthful foods, parent support for healthy eating and physical activity; physical activity resources at home, parent rules about physical activity. |
Moderator |
A moderating variable is one that affects the relationship between an independent variable and a dependent variable such that the relationship varies depending on the moderator. Moderators are also referred to as interactions. Examples in HCS include community obesity coalitions, socio-demographics, community contextual factors, school environments. |
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NCCOR |
The National Collaborative on Childhood Obesity Research (NCCOR) brings together four of the nation’s leading research funders – the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, (CDC), the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) and the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) – to address the problem of childhood obesity in America. NCCOR focuses on efforts that have the potential to benefit children, teens and their families, and the communities in which they live. |
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O |
Obesity |
Defined for children: BMI percentile >95th percentile for age and sex; for adults: BMI > 30 kg/m2 |
Overweight |
Defined for children: BMI percentile >85th but <95th percentile for age and sex; for adults: BMI > 25 and <30 kg/m2 |
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P |
PARA Instrument |
Physical Activity Resource Assessment (PARA) Instrument is a brief, one-page instrument to systematically document and describe the type, features, amenities, quality and incivilities of a variety of physical activity resources. |
Policies |
"Policies" are defined as basic principles, declared objectives, broad guidelines, regulations or laws. Policies can be established by government at local, state, and federal levels, or by organizations, such as schools or worksites. Examples of policies relevant to HCS are at various levels and include requirements for restaurant calorie labeling, school-based BMI measurement and reporting, school food service guidelines, governmental provision of food commodities to schools, pre-school and daycare food and physical activity requirements, practices affecting youth exposure to unhealthy food advertising, school physical education requirements, zoning that allows establishment of physical activity opportunities like parks and trails, and many others. |
Program |
A "program" is defined as a set of activities by governmental or other bodies intended to achieve a stated goal. Programs can include activities with multiple targets (e.g., child, family, environment) or processes (e.g., classes, media, counseling), and can combine multiple approaches. Programs relevant to this announcement include those that target energy balance in youth through diet and physical activity. Generally a program is named. Examples of programs include NIH's We Can! (Ways to Enhance Children's Activity and Nutrition)® program, the RWJF's Healthy Kids, Healthy Communities program, and the CDC Steps/REACH and State Nutrition, Physical Activity and Obesity (NPAO) programs. Programs also can be defined in terms of local and/or external resources provided to enable communities to engage in a set of activities or assessments, such as expert consultation, technical assistance, specific intervention tools or materials, and/or funding. |
Promising program/ policy |
A promising program or policy is defined as a known program or policy that is either evidence-based or is strong enough to reasonably expect to see an impact if studied. |
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R |
Race |
White, Black/African American, American Indian, Alaskan Native, Native Hawaiian, Guamanian, Samoan, Other Pacific Islander (Specify), Asian Indian, Chinese, Filipino, Japanese, Korean, Vietnamese, Other Asian (Specify), Some other race (Specify) |
RIPA Community |
Repeat in-person assessment (RIPA) communities are the first 40 communities visited in Wave 2 of the study that will undergo both a remote follow-up two years after baseline, and will have a second in-person assessment three years after baseline. These communities will also include the use of a local community documenter hired to prospectively assess program and policy changes on a quarterly basis between the baseline assessment and the 3-year follow-up assessment. |
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Snowball sample |
A sampling methodology in which new respondents are identified by current respondents via referrals |
Specific attributes of community programs and policies |
Examples: duration, funding, targets |
Standard Protocol |
Less detailed measures collected of all children and communities. |
Stakeholder |
Refers to people or organizations who have an interest in the issue or effort. |
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Wave 1 |
4 communities visited in the first year of data collection that will not have any follow-up assessments. |
Wave 2 |
275 communities that will be visited during the study that will have an in-person assessment. The first 200 Wave 2 communities (including the 40 RIPA communities) will also undergo a remote follow-up assessment one to two years after the baseline visit. |
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File Type | application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document |
Author | arteagass |
File Modified | 0000-00-00 |
File Created | 2021-01-31 |