Early Effects of the Federally Mandated Local Wellness Policy on School Nutrition Environments Appear Modest in Colorado's Rural, Low-Income Elementary Schools Journal Article
Overview
publication date
- November 1, 2010
has subject area
- Attitude - Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
- Child
- Child Nutritional Physiological Phenomena
- Colorado
- Education - Schools
- Education, Nonprofessional - Health Promotion
- Female
- Food Dispensers, Automatic
- Food Services
- Health Care Economics and Organizations - Health Policy
- Health Care Economics and Organizations - Nutrition Policy
- Health Care Evaluation Mechanisms - Program Evaluation
- Health Care Quality, Access, and Evaluation - Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
- Health Services Administration - Program Evaluation
- Humans
- Investigative Techniques - Program Evaluation
- Male
- Non-Medical Public and Private Facilities - Schools
- Overnutrition - Obesity
- Physical Examination - Obesity
- Physiological Phenomena - Obesity
- Population Characteristics - Poverty
- Preventive Health Services - Health Promotion
- Rural Population
- School Health Services
- Signs and Symptoms - Obesity
- Social Problems - Poverty
- Social Sciences - Health Policy
- Social Sciences - Health Policy
- Social Sciences - Nutrition Policy
- Social Sciences - Nutrition Policy
- Sociological Factors - Poverty
- Workforce
has restriction
- closed
Date in CU Experts
- October 2, 2013 10:13 AM
Full Author List
- Belansky ES; Cutforth N; Delong E; Litt J; Gilbert L; Scarbro S; Beatty B; Romaniello C; Brink L; Marshall JA
author count
- 10
citation count
- 38
published in
Other Profiles
International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)
- 0002-8223
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
Additional Document Info
start page
- 1712
end page
- 1717
volume
- 110
issue
- 11