15 results on '"Palmer, Shelly"'
Search Results
2. School Nutrition Stakeholders Find Utility in MealSim: An Agent-Based Model
- Author
-
Palmer, Shelly, Ciubotariu, Iulia, Ofori, Roland, Saenz, Mayra, Ellison, Brenna, and Prescott, Melissa Pflugh
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Policy, Systems, and Environmental Changes in Child Nutrition Programs: A Systematic Literature Review
- Author
-
Palmer, Shelly, Burton-Obanla, Amirah, Goon, Shatabdi, Allison, Trinity, Mitchell, Ana, Bogdonas, Kristin, Fombelle, Michelle, Hoffman, Ashley, Smith, Jenna, McCaffrey, Jennifer, and Prescott, Melissa Pflugh
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. A Systems Examination of Food Packaging and Other Single-Use Item Waste in School Nutrition Programs
- Author
-
Palmer, Shelly, Herritt, Cameron, Cunningham-Sabo, Leslie, Stylianou, Katerina S., and Prescott, Melissa Pflugh
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Learning What Works: A Mixed-Methods Study of American Self-identified Food Conservers.
- Author
-
Balto, Gwendoline, Palmer, Shelly, Hamann, Jade, Gutierrez, Elizabeth, Liu, Yiyang, and Prescott, Melissa Pflugh
- Subjects
- *
FOOD waste , *STRATEGIC planning , *FOCUS groups , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *RESEARCH methodology , *FOOD preservation - Abstract
Identify psychosocial factors influencing food waste mitigation and explore motivations and strategies for successful conservation among self-identified food conservers. Mixed-methods study consisting of an online survey estimating food waste production and psychosocial factors and a focus group to explore waste mitigation strategies and motivations. Sampled 27 self-identified conservers (female, aged 18–30 years, White/Asian). Mean household food waste was 6.6 cups/wk (range, 0.0–97.9 cups/wk; median 1.3 cups). Reported waste mitigation strategies include proactive mitigation and adaptive recovery measures in each phase of the food management continuum. Conservers reported various intrinsic and extrinsic motivations to reduce food waste and viewed barriers as manageable. Food conservers act on high intentions to reduce waste by consistently employing both proactive waste mitigation and adaptive food recovery measures. Future research is needed to determine if these findings hold in larger, more diverse samples and link specific behaviors to waste volume. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Midwest Consumer Shopping Habits, Nutrition Knowledge, and Latino Tienda Use.
- Author
-
Palmer, Shelly M. and Winham, Donna M.
- Subjects
- *
FOOD preferences , *NUTRITION , *FOOD prices , *GROCERY shopping , *HISPANIC Americans - Abstract
Objective: In this study, we assessed the intrapersonal, interpersonal, and community influences on nutrition knowledge, views on healthy foods, grocery store choice, and grocery shopping patterns specifically at Latino tiendas, among Midwestern adults by Hispanic or non-Hispanic ethnicity. Methods: We surveyed a convenience sample of adults on an open-ended definition of healthy foods, nutrition knowledge, shopping behaviors, and reasons for store choice. Results: Of the 149 respondents, no ethnic differences were observed in qualitative definitions of healthy foods (low fat, unprocessed, high nutrient content). Fewer Hispanics than non-Hispanics correctly identified healthier options for rice, canned fruits, and canned tuna. Respondents indicated that proximity to home and food price were motivators of store choice. Significantly more Hispanics than non-Hispanics shopped at Walmart (42% vs 15%; p < .001), and at tiendas (77% vs 14%; p < .001). Food selection was the most frequent reason given by all for shopping at tiendas. Conclusions: Hispanics and non-Hispanics share similar views of healthy food definitions and important store characteristics. Non-Hispanics could potentially use tiendas more frequently considering expressed interests in food prices and selection. Some healthier food options that are culturally important were less known by Hispanics. Further research with a larger sample is needed to substantiate these preliminary findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Health Behaviors among Low-income Hispanic and Non-Hispanic White Women.
- Author
-
Winham, Donna M., Palmer, Shelly M., Armstrong Florian, Traci L., and Shelley, Mack C.
- Subjects
- *
ACCULTURATION , *ANALYSIS of variance , *CHI-squared test , *STATISTICAL correlation , *FOOD habits , *HEALTH behavior , *PSYCHOLOGY of Hispanic Americans , *PROBABILITY theory , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RESEARCH funding , *STATISTICAL sampling , *WHITE people , *WOMEN , *FOOD safety , *CROSS-sectional method , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Objectives: We determined relationships between food behaviors and health-risk factors by acculturation among limited-income Hispanic and non-Hispanic white women. Methods: Women aged 18-49 years were recruited from income-based programs in metro-Phoenix, Arizona. Self-administered surveys in English or Spanish included demographics, a 10-item food behavior checklist, health-risk factors, food security, and acculturation. Differences by 4 acculturation/ ethnicity categories were assessed with chi-square and analysis of variance (ANOVA). We created a food behavior scale. Results: Eighty-two percent self-identified as Hispanic (N = 358), with 45% Hispanic-dominant, 25% bicultural, 12% English-dominant, and 18% non-Hispanic white for acculturation status. Food behavior checklist results showed that English-dominant Hispanic and non-Hispanic white women were more likely to feed their children soon after waking, refrigerate meat/dairy promptly, not add salt to food, smoke cigarettes and be food insecure (p < .001). Education, not acculturation, was a significant predictor of the food behavior scale. BMI did not differ by acculturation, but 33% of Hispanic-dominant Latinas did not know their height and/or weight. These less acculturated Latinas had significantly greater food security, but lacked health insurance and years of education. Conclusions: Program outreach tailored by acculturation that considers educational level is needed to emphasize existing positive behaviors and address knowledge gaps among low socioeconomic women to improve health and reduce disparities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Knowledge Gaps of the Health Benefits of Beans among Low-Income Women.
- Author
-
Palmer, Shelly M., Winham, Donna M., and Hradek, Christine
- Subjects
- *
BEANS , *KNOWLEDGE gap theory , *HEALTH behavior , *HISPANIC American women , *NUTRITION education , *LEGUMES as food , *POOR women , *ACCULTURATION , *HEALTH , *ANALYSIS of variance , *CHI-squared test , *CULTURE , *EDUCATION , *HISPANIC Americans , *LEGUMES , *MARITAL status , *NUTRITION , *POVERTY , *PROBABILITY theory , *STATISTICAL sampling , *SMOKING , *SURVEYS , *WHITE people , *WOMEN'S health , *INFORMATION resources , *CROSS-sectional method , *HEALTH literacy , *PHYSICAL activity - Abstract
Objectives: We determined knowledge of the health benefits of consuming beans, and assessed if awareness varied by acculturation status among Hispanic and non-Hispanic low-income women. Methods: We used a self-administered survey with Iowa women aged 18-65 years who were eligible to receive income-based services through 2 healthcare clinics, a WIC clinic, and Extension Outreach. Chi-square and ANOVA were used to compare bean health benefit knowledge, demographics, health-risk factors, nutrition information seeking, and self-efficacy by acculturation categories. Results: Of the 158 women who completed the survey, 58% were Hispanic, with a mean age of 36 years. In terms of acculturation, 24% were Hispanic-dominant, 30% bicultural, and 46% English dominant. Over 50% of all respondents did not know bean consumption lowered cholesterol, aided blood glucose control, or reduced some cancer risks. Responses for 5 of 7 knowledge statements differed significantly by acculturation. Hispanic-dominant and bicultural women reported significantly better health, higher bean consumption, and less cigarette smoking than English-dominant women. Bicultural and English-dominant women were more likely to use the Internet for nutrition information. Conclusions: There are knowledge gaps about the health benefits of bean consumption among low-income women. Nutrition education to improve their knowledge may lead to increased bean consumption, reducing health disparities and improving nutrition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. P004 Strategies and Unmet Needs to Reduce Household Food Waste Reported by Self-identified Food Conservers.
- Author
-
Balto, Gwendoline, Palmer, Shelly, Gutierrez, Elizabeth, Hamann, Jade, Liu, Eva, and Prescott, Melissa Pflugh
- Subjects
- *
STRATEGIC planning , *CONSUMER attitudes , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *NEEDS assessment - Abstract
In the United States, about 30% of edible food produced is wasted, and 20% is wasted at the consumer level. Yet, an estimated 35% of Americans "put a lot of effort" into wasted food reduction, suggesting an opportunity to learn from these food conservers through positive deviance inquiry. The purpose of the study was to identify food conservation practices, psychosocial drivers, and unmet waste mitigation needs of self-identified food conservers. Adult, self-identified food conservers were recruited online and screened for criteria of age and food procurement/preparation responsibility. Eligible participants completed a 90-minute virtual focus group and survey consisting of previously validated questions assessing household food waste amounts, behaviors and attitudes. Verbatim focus group transcripts were dual coded and thematically analyzed using a hybrid inductive-deductive approach. A total of n = 27 participants completed the questionnaire and one of six focus groups consisting of 3-6 participants each. The majority of the participants were White (48%) or Asian (41%), female (67%), had a college degree (74%), had on average 2.6 members in their residence, and made above the US median household income (56%). Reported strategies to reduce food waste included meal planning, creating and adhering to shopping lists, food inventory management, anti-depth organization of food storage spaces to promote maximum visibility, meal prepping, cooking meals in the home and repurposing leftovers. Participants reported intentions to avoid waste, confidence in their ability to reduce waste, and personal and subjective norms that encourage mitigation efforts. Participants reported needing assistance determining optimal produce storage methods and desired opportunities to learn from other food conservers. Self-identified food conservers reported a variety of household food waste mitigation strategies, which could be leveraged to positively influence other households. While these findings suggest relatively high food literacy among self-identified food conservers, addressing their unmet needs may improve waste mitigation. USDA; UIUC Division of Nutritional Sciences Vision 20/20 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Development of a Nutrition Environment Assessment Tool for Latino Ethnic Stores.
- Author
-
Baier, Jenny L., Palmer, Shelly M., Winham, Donna M., and Shelley, Mack C.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. The Efficacy and Cost-Effectiveness of Replacing Whole Apples with Sliced in the National School Lunch Program.
- Author
-
Palmer, Shelly, Metcalfe, Jessica Jarick, Ellison, Brenna, Wright, Toni Kay, Sadler, Lindsey, Hinojosa, Katherine, McCaffrey, Jennifer, and Prescott, Melissa Pflugh
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Putting Knowledge into Practice: Low-Income Women Talk about Food Choice Decisions.
- Author
-
Palmer, Shelly M., Knoblauch, Simon T., Winham, Donna M., Hiller, Molly B., and Shelley, Mack C.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Dry Bean Preferences and Attitudes among Midwest Hispanic and Non-Hispanic White Women.
- Author
-
Winham, Donna M., Tisue, Megan E., Palmer, Shelly M., Cichy, Karen A., and Shelley, Mack C.
- Abstract
Bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) intakes in the United States (US) lag behind dietary recommendations despite their positive nutrition profile, health benefits for reducing chronic disease risk, and inclusion in nutrition assistance programs. Low-income groups, including Hispanics, have an increased risk of cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, obesity, and some cancers. Hispanic dietary quality and bean consumption may decline with increasing acculturation. Intakes at recommended levels could improve health in all vulnerable low-income populations. The study objectives were to describe dry and canned bean preferences, consumption frequency, and attitudes among low-income Hispanic and non-Hispanic white women, and to assess if these characteristics differed by ethnicity and acculturation level among the Latinas. A convenience sample of 158 women, aged 18–65 years, completed a written survey in English or Spanish at two healthcare clinics, one Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children office, and five County Extension nutrition education and outreach programs in Iowa. Less acculturated Latinas consumed beans more often, preferred dry to canned, bought in bulk, valued color and shape in dry bean selection, and held less positive attitudes toward canned beans in contrast to bicultural/more acculturated and non-Hispanic white women. Ethnicity and acculturation level have a role in varying purchase patterns and attitudes regarding dry and canned beans. Culturally-held differences should be considered in nutrition programs and leveraged to increase consumption and improve health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Socio-Ecological Barriers to Dry Grain Pulse Consumption among Low-Income Women: A Mixed Methods Approach.
- Author
-
Palmer, Shelly M., Winham, Donna M., Oberhauser, Ann M., and Litchfield, Ruth E.
- Abstract
The purpose of this study was to determine the socio-ecological influences on dry grain pulse consumption (beans, peas, lentils, chickpeas) among low-socioeconomic women in Iowa. Seven focus groups were conducted, with 36 women who qualified for income-based federal assistance. Data were collected from October 2017 to January 2018. Participants completed a survey that gathered individual demographics, assessed perceptions of dry grain pulses, and level of food security. Fifty-eight percent of the women were non-Hispanic white, and 39% were African American, all with an average age of 34.7 years. Thirty-three percent of the women consumed pulses less than once per week. Over 80% agreed that beans were healthful and satiating. Some health benefits of beans were unknown by more than 33% of the population, e.g., lower cancer risk, lower LDL, maintain blood glucose. Only 30% of the women were food secure. Focus group audio recordings were transcribed and analyzed by two researchers, using the grounded theory approach. At the policy level, participants knew pulses were included in USA federal nutrition assistance programs like the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC). Pulses were widely available in grocery stores in communities. Interpersonally, women felt that male partners preferred meats, and children needed animal-source proteins. Individually, women perceived uncooked dry pulses were challenging to prepare. Conclusively, more detailed instruction on pulse preparation, different pulse varieties, and offering canned pulses through WIC may increase consumption. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. MealSim: Data-Driven Predictions of Child Selection, Consumption, and Waste Behaviors to Promote Increased Fruit and Vegetable Consumption.
- Author
-
Prescott, Melissa, Ellison, Brenna, Ofori, Roland, Amaguaya, Mayra Saenz, Ciubotariu, Iulia, and Palmer, Shelly
- Subjects
- *
FOOD waste prevention , *FOOD habits , *VEGETABLES , *FOOD consumption , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *FOOD preferences , *FRUIT , *HEALTH promotion - Abstract
The objective of the MealSim study is to empower school nutrition directors with evidence-based strategies specific to their institution to improve student fruit and vegetable consumption while decreasing food waste through the development and evaluation of a school meal systems agent-based model simulation tool. The project aims to improve fruit and vegetable consumption and reduce food waste. Research activities will be conducted through two key objectives: Build an agent-based model (MealSim) to simulate dietary behavior in school meal systems and validate MealSim using data from school nutrition programs in collaboration with key stakeholders. Year three focused on analyzing qualitative data from key stakeholders who provided feedback on MealSim, identifying priorities for model adaptations based stakeholder input, and revising model validation procedures due to COVID-related changes to school nutrition programs. School nutrition stakeholders viewed the MealSim interface positively and reported several potential uses for the simulation tool, such as advocating for policy changes and various training/educational purposes. Stakeholders suggested that additional features be added to MealSim to better represent the school nutrition environment, such as more nuanced time use and number of staff supervising students during lunch. Lunch period structured observation protocols were revised to better differentiate between seated lunch time and other lunch period time uses, as requested by stakeholder feedback. Plate waste assessment protocols were modified to adapt to COVID-related changes and supply chain challenges to school nutrition programs. Adapting MealSim according to stakeholder feedback will facilitate trust in the tool and likely improve its utility. It is anticipated that MealSim will empower school nutrition stakeholders to make evidence-based decisions on how to modify their cafeteria operations to improve fruit and vegetable consumption and reduce food waste, ultimately resulting in improved public and planetary health. 2020-68015-30735 This work is supported by the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.