Maine SNAP-Ed presents on intervention success and program best practices at national meeting

The 911±¬ΑΟΝψΊμΑμ½ν Center for Excellence in Public Health (CEPH) had several presentations at the national annual meeting of the Association of SNAP (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program) Nutrition Education Administrators (ASNNA), held in Arlington, Virginia, from Feb. 7β9 and virtually on March 1.
The conference's theme was βReconnect, Rebuild, Reimagine.β Invited speakers highlighted SNAP-Edβs alignment with the White House Conference on Hunger, Nutrition, and Health and the Biden-Harris Administrationβs commitment to end hunger and reduce diet-related diseases by 2030. Innovative approaches to increase nutrition security through equitable programming were a key focus of conference presentations.
CEPH staff from Maine SNAP-Ed presented on work related to program implementation, social marketing, program evaluation and data dissemination, and equity. Panel presentations highlighted work completed this past year through research and practice collaborations with state partners and academic peers from more than a dozen partnering universities.
The following individuals contributed to the presentations:
- Lori Kaley, M.S., RDN, MSB β Program Manager
- Pamela Bruno, M.P.H. β Senior Research Associate
- Kira Rodriguez, M.H.S. β Senior Research Associate
- Colleen Fuller, M.P.H. β Research Assistant
- Hannah Ruhl, M.P.H. β Obesity Prevention Coordinator
Presentations shared at the ASNNA 2023 in-person and virtual conferences:
- Kaley co-authored and presented βMaineβs SNAC Collaborative Approach Increases Nutrition Programming and Use of Nutrition Incentives,β covering state-level collaborations to implement initiatives that impact food and nutrition security for Mainers eligible for SNAP
- Bruno co-authored and presented βAsset Framing to Promote Equity and Inclusion through SNAP-Ed Evaluation,β which introduced a template and approach to program data dissemination that emphasizes community assets over deficits
- Fuller co-authored and presented β and Bruno, Ruhl, and Kaley co-authored β βApplying an Equity Audit to Reduce Stigma: Assessing a Maine SNAP-Ed Participant Cookbook,β which introduced a tool to assess and revise audience-facing program materials through an equity and trauma-informed lens
- Rodriguez co-authored βUnderstanding SNAP-Ed GIS Maps/Dashboards Uses and Needs,β which reported on mapping practices and capacity and made recommendations for national models for integrating mapping into assessment and evaluation
- Ruhl co-authored βSeason to Taste: Variations in SNAP-Ed Social Marketing,β an overview of social marketing best practices for SNAP-Ed
- Bruno co-authored βCentering Equity in SNAP-Ed Evaluation,β a panel presentation highlighting national efforts to integrate equity frameworks into program evaluation
- Bruno co-authored β7-Year Analyses of Nationwide Trends in Use of the SNAP-Ed Evaluation Framework,β reporting on outcomes from the practitioner-led trend study of a national evaluation framework that informs program planning and evaluation
Maine SNAP-Ed, implemented by 911±¬ΑΟΝψΊμΑμ½ν through a contract with Maineβs Office for Family Independence, addresses nutrition security and wellness in low-resource settings across the state. The funding comes from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (U.S.D.A.) and is granted to over 160 agencies throughout the nation. Implementing agencies include universities, nonprofits, state health and agriculture departments, and Tribal entities. ASNNA brings member implementing agencies together annually to share funding initiatives and advance best practices.

Pamela Bruno

Colleen Fuller

Lori Kaley

Kira Rodriguez

Hannah Ruhl