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Let's Move! Child Care EMPOWERS child care providers to make positive health changes in children, early on, that will last a lifetime. Let's Move! Child Care aligns with the ADHS Empower program and ADHS proudly supports this great initiative. Let's Move! Child Care gives the support providers need by providing tools and resources for healthy eating and active living in child care centers and homes. Visit their site and become a champion for healthy choices by joining Let's Move! Child Care for free resources and information.
Full Booklet in PDF (free)
Grow It, Try It, Like It! Preschool Fun with Fruits and Vegetables is a garden-themed nutrition education kit for child care center staff that introduces children to: three fruits - peaches, strawberries, and cantaloupe, and three vegetables - spinach, sweet potatoes, and crookneck squash.
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BACKGROUND: Parenting interventions have achieved changes in factors associated with childhood obesity but few have tested the effects on multiple parental influences. PURPOSE: This study examined the efficacy of an intervention aimed at improving several dimensions of parenting related to childhood obesity. DESIGN: The study used a 2 x 2 factorial design. SETTING/PARTICIPANTS: In 2003, a sample of 13 Southern California schools was randomized to one of four conditions: micro-environment only, macro-environment only, micro-plus-macro-environment, and no treatment control condition. Participants included 811 predominantly Mexican immigrant/Mexican-American mothers with children in kindergarten through second grade. INTERVENTION: In both micro conditions, participants received monthly home visits by a promotora over a 7-month period plus monthly mailed newsletters. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: In 2008, intervention effects were examined on (1) parenting strategies, including limit setting, monitoring, discipline, control, and reinforcement related to children's diet and physical activity; (2) parental support for physical activity; (3) parent-mediated family behaviors such as family meals eaten together and TV watching during family dinners; and (4) perceived barriers and other parent cognitions related to children's eating and activity. RESULTS: At the 2-year follow-up, significant improvements were observed in three of five parenting strategies, parental support, and two of four parent-mediated family behaviors among parents receiving the micro intervention (i.e., those who received promotora visits and monthly newsletters), as compared with those in the macro-only and control conditions. CONCLUSIONS: Aspects of parenting related to children's risk for obesity and related health outcomes are modifiable with the support of a promotora and print media. Copyright 2010 American Journal of Preventive Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.PMID: 20117571 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]PMCID: PMC2832210 [Available on 2011/2/1]