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The
Role of the WIC Program in Improving
Peri-conceptional Nutrition: A Small
Grants Program
The
University of California at Los Angeles
(UCLA) is managing a small-grants
research program, funded by the Food and
Nutrition Service of the US Department
of Agriculture. Through a competitive
process, UCLA awarded seven grants in
June 2012. The awardees are listed
below, along with a description of their
projects. The two-year projects to
academic researchers, in partnership
with WIC agencies, will focus on the
role that the WIC program is playing and
can play in improving nutrition in pre-conceptional
and peri-conceptional (between
pregnancies) periods. FNS and UCLA
anticipate that the grants will foster
future collaboration and additional
outside funding, along with findings
that can inform WIC program development
and nutrition education nationwide.
“Association
Between Interpregnancy Interval And
Maternal Health Outcomes Among WIC
Participants,” Baruch College – CUNY,
Oregon Health and Science University,
and Oregon WIC Program.
The
proposed study will use a mixed methods
approach to analyze the relationship
between the interpregnancy interval (IPI)
and maternal health outcomes, including
risk factors associated with a short
interpregnancy interval (IPI), whether a
short IPI is associated with negative
maternal health indicators. It will
also examine mothers’ views of birth
spacing, periconceptional health
behaviors, and WIC’s potential influence
in both areas.
“E-Moms:
A Personalized Telehealth Intervention
For Health And Weight Loss In Postpartum
Women,” Louisiana State University,
Pennington Biomedical Research Center,
East Baton Rouge Parish WIC Clinic, and
Capitol City Family Health Center WIC
Clinic at Family Roads.
The
objective of this study is to implement
a personalized weight management program
to overweight and obese postpartum women
in WIC. It will use a
randomized-controlled design, and
deliver nutritional counseling through
the WIC Clinic (control) or a
personalized, postpartum health
intervention delivered remotely via
Smartphone (treatment). The study will
examine the impact of the treatment on
weight loss and nutrition practices at
six-months post-partum. The study will
also test the efficacy of the telehealth
platform to deliver health messages
targeting other behaviors such as
smoking, alcohol and drug abuse,
breastfeeding, postpartum depression and
infant food intake.
“Peri-Conception Health In The San Luis
Valley,” University of Colorado at
Denver and San Luis Valley WIC Clinic.
This
study will examine the impact on
periconceptional weight and nutrition
behaviors of two interventions: the
HeartSmartKids™ (HSK) electronic program
– a bilingual kiosk and decision support
system that assists providers in
clinical care and that will be adapted
for use with women in post-, inter- and
pre-partum phases – and training WIC
educators in motivational interviewing
to support maternal health behavior
change.
“Improving Periconceptional Health
Through The Prevention Of Excessive
Gestational Weight Gain: From Research
To Intervention,” Pepperdine University
and Public Health Foundation (PHFE) WIC
Program.
This
project will assess the impact on
pregnancy weight gain of new individual
and group educational materials focused
on weight gain and the IOM
recommendations for pregnant women.
“Short
Inter-Pregnancy Interval And Weight
Retention Among Massachusetts WIC
Participants: Identifying Strategies To
Improve Interconceptional Health,”
Simmons College, Boston and
Massachusetts WIC Program.
The
project will use 9 years of longitudinal
Massachusetts (MA) WIC data to assess
the impact of WIC on IPI among women who
are WIC participants either prenatally
or in the post-partum period of an
initial pregnancy, determine the factors
affecting weight retention (or loss)
from one pregnancy to the next, and
consider the degree to which weight
retention is affected by the intensity
of WIC nutrition education.
“Integrating Obstetrical Care And WIC
Nutritional Service To Address Maternal
Obesity And Postpartum Weight Retention:
Altering The Life Course Trajectory,”
Johns Hopkins University, Bloomberg
School of Public Health and the WIC
Nutrition in Pregnancy Clinic (NIP) in
the Johns Hopkins
Obstetrics and Gynecology (OB/GYN)
Department.
The
purpose of this research is to develop
and evaluate the impact of a
cost-neutral model to completely
integrate postpartum obstetrical care
and WIC nutritional services to address
maternal postpartum weight retention and
overall periconceptional health. It
will consider the impact of an intensive
postpartum nutrition intervention
referred to as WICNIP on weight and
nutrition outcomes.
“Reaching High Risk Post-Partum Women
For Nutritional Assessment And
Counseling Via A Telephone-Based
Coaching Program,”
The
University of California at San
Francisco
(UCSF), Sonoma County WIC Program, and
the San Francisco County WIC Program.
The
project will adapt a recently developed
post-partum diabetes prevention
intervention created by the partners for
the WIC context . The program, Support
via Telephone Advice and
Resources (STAR-MAMA), is based
on an Automated Telephone
Self-Management Support
system (ATSM) was developed for at-risk
populations. The study will implement
the modified STAR-MAMA system with WIC
participants and consider its impact on
nutritional risk and health behaviors.
Last modified:
02/24/2013
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