JNEB Reports
2 Results
- Report
Obesity in Rural Youth: Looking Beyond Nutrition and Physical Activity
Journal of Nutrition Education and BehaviorVol. 43Issue 5p401–408Published in issue: September, 2011- Debra B. Reed
- Patti J. Patterson
- Nicole Wasserman
Cited in Scopus: 15Contributors to excessive obesity in rural youth include well-documented nutrition and physical activity behaviors. However, emerging research suggests that preventing excessive weight gain and smoking during pregnancy, teen pregnancy, and child abuse also could reduce obesity in this vulnerable population. These traditional and emerging, nontraditional factors need to be addressed within the confines of current challenges faced by rural communities. An enhanced ecological model provides a framework for combining traditional and nontraditional factors into a more comprehensive approach that addresses the complexity of the issues contributing to youth obesity. - Report
Cost-Effectiveness Model for Youth EFNEP Programs: What Do We Measure and How Do We Do It?
Journal of Nutrition Education and BehaviorVol. 43Issue 4p295–302Published online: March 7, 2011- Elena Serrano
- Mary McFerren
- Michael Lambur
- Michael Ellerbock
- Kathy Hosig
- Nancy Franz
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 3The Youth Expanded Food and Nutrition Education Program (EFNEP) is one of the United States Department of Agriculture's hallmark nutrition education programs for limited-resource youth. The objective of this study was to gather opinions from experts in EFNEP and related content areas to identify costs, effects (impacts), and related instruments to develop a cost-effectiveness model (instrument) for youth EFNEP, which does not exist. A cost-effectiveness model determines the economic or financial cost of producing an impact.