State and Local Strategies
Improving nutrition throughout the lifespan helps reduce the risk of chronic disease. Two priority actions that state and local communities can take to improve nutrition are to make healthy food choices easier everywhere and to make breastfeeding easier to start and continue.
Additional priority strategies with nutrition components are strengthening obesity prevention standards in early care and education settings and increasing access to family healthy weight programs.
Make Healthy Food Choices Easier Everywhere
Two priority strategies are to promote food service and nutrition guidelines where food is sold, served, or distributed and expand fruit and vegetable voucher incentive and produce prescription programs. See these links for background, potential activities, resources, and examples of what others are doing:
Also see:
- Food Service Guidelines for Federal Facilities
- Food Service Guidelines Implementation Toolkit
- Guidelines and recommendations
- Additional resources
Make Breastfeeding Easier To Start And Continue
Support breastfeeding in environments where families birth, live, work, play and raise children to make it easier to initiate and continue breastfeeding. This work can help eliminate disparities in breastfeeding rates.
The priority strategy for breastfeeding is to implement policies and activities that achieve continuity of care. For background information, potential activities, resources, and examples of what others are doing, see:
Also see:
Strengthen Obesity Prevention Standards for ECE Settings
Promote children’s healthy growth and development in early care and education (ECE) by increasing access to healthy food and nutrition, breastfeeding support, Farm to ECE, and physical activity. States and communities can support children’s healthy growth and development in ECE at three levels: state systems, programs, and providers. ECE strategies may include Farm to ECE programs that increase access to nutritious foods with a hands-on approach to food, health and agriculture education.
For background information, potential activities, resources, and examples of what others are doing, see:
Also see:
Guide to Strategies to Increase the Consumption of Fruits and Vegetables
Helps program managers, policy makers, and other leaders select strategies to increase the consumption of fruits and vegetables. Includes rationale, evidence of effectiveness, and key considerations.
Guide to Strategies to Support Breastfeeding Mothers and Babies [PDF-9.71MB]
Provides information for state and local community members to choose the breastfeeding strategy that best meets their needs. Builds on the research evidence demonstrating effective strategies and includes program examples and resources.
Increase Access to Family Healthy Weight Programs
Help children with obesity and their families access programs that help them incorporate healthy eating, stress reduction, optimal sleep, and increased physical activity into their daily behaviors. Making it easier to access these programs will help support healthy growth and help reduce the risk of chronic disease.
For background information, potential activities, resources, and examples of what others are doing, see:
Also see:
Residents of Grand Rapids, Michigan, Get More Access to Fresh Produce (2018)
Community Garden Helps Low-Income North Carolinians Eat Their Vegetables (2018)
Rural Tennessee Churches and Coalitions Help Congregants Make Healthy Choices (2018)
Food Pantries Distribute More Fresh Produce in West Piedmont Health District, VA (2017)
Alaska Child Care Workgroup Addresses Childhood Obesity (2018)
Minnesota Launches New Program for Breastfeeding Support (2021)
Better Maternity Care Practices Lead to Increases in Breastfeeding in Hawaii (2018)