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BORDER HEALTHBREAKFAST HOURAT NMSU
SWIHDR.NMSU.EDU
September 14th:
SWIHDR
October 19th
College of Health and Social Services
November 16th
College of Business
January 18th
College of Agricultural, Consumer, and
Environmental Sciences
February 15th
College of Engineering
March 15th
College of Education
April 19th
College of Arts and Sciences
2017-2018 PRESENTATIONS
“Cooperative Extension:
Partners in Creating
Healthy Communities”College of ACES:
Karim Martinez
Kelly Knight
Laynee Kuenstler
Lucinda Banegas-Carreon
Overview of the ACES
Cooperative Extension Service
Karim Martinez
Doña Ana County Family & Consumer Sciences Agent
What is the ACES
Cooperative Extension Service?
• The community education arm of the NMSU
College of ACES.
• CES faculty are attached to all 33 county
governments and many tribal areas in NM.
• Established through Smith-Lever Act of 1914.
NMSU in Every County
Mission of ACES-CES
To provide the people of New Mexico with
practical, research-based knowledge and
programs to improve their quality of life.
Program Areas:
Agriculture, Family and Consumer Sciences,
4-H Youth Development, Community Economic
Development
Why “Cooperative”?
Backed by federal, state and local funding, the
Cooperative Extension Service is a cooperative
effort between NMSU and county
governments.
Structure of ACES-CES
Extension Director
Associate Director
District Department
Heads
County Program Directors
County Agents
Department Heads
Specialists
Grant Funded
Programs
Grant Funded
Programs
NMSU-ACES Pillars
Cooperative Extension’s National
Framework for Health and Wellness
58%
23%
10%
9%
ChartTitle
1stQtr 2ndQtr 3rdQtr 4thQtr
BasedontheNa onalPreven onStrategyAc onPlan,U.S.DepartmentofHealth&HumanServices
National Action Teams
BAA (Board on Ag Assembly) – BoHS (Board on Human Sciences)
Strengths of CES in Health
Outreach
• Located in every county.
• Connected to communities and can assess needs.
• Provides programs based on clientele needs.
• Has a long history of providing trusted information.
• Information is practical and taught in ways that
develops skills.
Border Health Disparities
• Child Obesity
– NM Border Counties is 16.9%, Hidalgo County 21.9%
– U.S. is 13.9%
• Child Food Insecurity
– NM Border Counties is 28.71%, Luna County is 36.2%
– U.S. is 20.9%
• Diabetes Hospitalizations
– NM Border Counties are 150.23 per 100,000 population, Luna County is 243
– U.S. is 132.8 per 100,000 population
• Diabetes Deaths
– NM Border Counties are 26.4 per 100,000 population, Hidalgo County is 25
– U.S. is 15.2 per 100,000 population Source: NM DOH Office of Border Health
Border Health Disparities at-a-Glance
Ideas for Cooking and
Nutrition
Kelly Knight
Otero County Family & Consumer Sciences Agent
Ideas for Cooking and
Nutrition
Funded by:
SNAP-Ed EFNEP
ICAN Target Audiences
• Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program
Education (SNAP-Ed)
– SNAP eligible audiences
• Expanded Food and Nutrition Education
Program (EFNEP)
– Limited resource families with children
• Many Nutrition Educators are bilingual
Adult Sites
• ISD Offices
• WIC Clinics
• Food Distribution Sites
• Farmer’s Markets
• Senior Centers
• Community Centers
• Public Housing
• Community Gardens
Youth Sites
• School Classrooms
• Afterschool Programs
• School Gardens
• Community Gardens
• Summer Feeding Sites
National Diabetes
Prevention Program
Lucinda Banegas-Carreon
Extension Associate II, NDPP Program Coordinator
(National Diabetes Prevention Program)
Overview
• 1 year-long Lifestyle Change program
• Recruits participants diagnosed with prediabetes
• Includes 16 weekly, 1 hour sessions and transitions into 8
monthly 1 hour maintenance sessions
• Goal is to lose between 5-7% of the participants body weight
• Methods include keeping food and physical activity minute
logs to help visualize participants visualize their weekly
progress.
NDPP- Cooperative Extension
• Doña Ana, Bernalillo, Los Alamos, and Chavez
Counties have all participated in the program and
are gearing up to provide programming in 2018.
• Expanding to Otero County and Tribal Communities
as well as possible other county sites.
Kitchen Creations Diabetes
Cooking School
Laynee Kuenstler
Luna County Family & Consumer Sciences Agent
Kitchen Creations Video
Overview
• Sponsored by the New Mexico Department of
Health Diabetes Prevention and Control Program.
• Offered in 15 counties.
• Spanish and English options available.
• Offered to individuals with Type 1 and Type 2
diabetes.
Overview
• Series of four classes.
• Adults with diabetes learn how to make healthy,
delicious meals.
• Participants learn food safety, how to plan meals,
read food labels, balance carbohydrates and other
tips.
Success Story
• Kitchen Creations served 470 New Mexicans last year.
• Several months after attending the Kitchen Creations
cooking school in Valencia County, a participant called
the Extension Office to share her good news. She had
just returned from the doctor, and her A1C had
dropped. She credits the improvement to the changes
she and her husband made because of the program.
Kitchen Creation in Action
Chronic Disease
Self-Management Programs
Karim Martinez
Doña Ana County Family & Consumer Sciences Agent
Overview
• Family of programs developed by Stanford
University.
• 6-week workshop, once a week for 2.5 hours.
• Goal is to develop participants skills in living a
healthy life with a chronic condition.
• Participants receive book & relaxation CD.
Evidence-Based Outcomes
• Participants learn action planning, problem-solving,
decision-making, communication skills, etc.
• Stanford has 30+years of research showing
participants reduce the number of emergency room
visits and improve quality of life.
• Reduces costs of unnecessary health care.
Chronic Disease Self-Management
Programs in New Mexico
• Sponsored by New Mexico Diabetes Prevention and Control
Program.
• Community partners and contractors are working together to
expand this program statewide.
• NMSU-CES is providing 4-day workshop leader trainings
and 6-week community workshops in English and Spanish.
• Provided in Bernalillo, Catron, Doña Ana, Eddy, Grant,
Luna, Otero, Socorro and Torrance Counties.
CDSMP Success Stories
“I come out of the program with a new view of how I should live my life.
I am now walking, I am drinking much more water, am learning Tai Chi
and am looking at all there is to do and learn out there….this program
has given me many tools to adjust to my pain and live a health,
satisfying life. I will miss coming here on Thursdays.”
“it also motivated us, because
everyone there is going
through difficulties, some even
more than our own, so we
were not alone”
21
Contact Information
Kelly Knight, FCS Agent
Otero County
kelknigh@nmsu.edu
Laynee Kuenstler, FCS Agent
Luna County
laynee@nmsu.edu
Karim Martinez, FCS Agent
Doña Ana County
karmarti@nmsu.edu
Lucinda Banegas-Carreon
Extension Associate II
EFCS
lubanega@nmsu.edu
Sonja Koukel, PhD
Community & Environmental Health
Specialist
EFCS
sdkoukel@nmsu.edu
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