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| Unhealthy Snack Food Advertising to Children Increased Despite Industry Pledges to Self-Regulate 
 Children saw substantially more television advertising for unhealthy 
snacks in the past five years, comparing 2014 to 2010, according to a 
new study,
Snack FACTS, by the Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity at the 
University of Connecticut. Children's and teen's exposure to TV ads for 
unhealthy snacks including cookies, chips, and fruit snacks increased in
 this period, despite companies' promises
 to market healthier products to children. Companies have developed some
 healthier snacks to meet updated national standards for snacks sold in 
schools, "Smart Snacks," but with the exception of yogurt, these 
healthier products were not advertised to children
 on TV or the internet, the new study shows. "Companies have recognized 
the business opportunity in marketing healthy snacks to children and 
teens in schools. Now they must also recognize that aggressive marketing
 of unhealthy snack foods to young people is
 not worth the cost to children's health," said Jennifer Harris, the 
lead author of the study and the Rudd Center's Director of Marketing 
Initiatives.
 
 
 
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| New Continuing Medical Education Course Addresses Weight Bias 
and Strategies to Improve Health Care Delivery for Patients with 
Overweight/Obesity 
 The Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity and the University of Connecticut School of Medicine have developed an
online Continuing Medical Education Course (CME) for health care 
providers to improve the quality of care for patients with overweight 
and obesity, and help reduce weight stigmatization in clinical settings.
 The novel, free course can be completed online.
 "This course responds to increasing calls for training and education to
 improve obesity care and prevent negative stigma toward patients with 
obesity. For clinicians working with this patient population, the course
 equips them with strategies to improve provider-patient
 communication, make positive changes in the medical office environment,
 and increase awareness of personal biases that could unintentionally 
compromise patient care," said Rebecca Puhl, Deputy Director of the 
UConn Rudd Center, who led the course development.
 
 
 
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Rudd Center in the News
 
Jennifer Harris, the 
Rudd Center's Director of Marketing Initiatives, was among the public 
health researchers and advocates criticizing an integrated-advertising 
deal between Pepsi and Fox for the hit TV show
 Empire, about a fictional family of hip-hop stars. "Soda consumption is
 going down overall, so it would make sense for (Pepsi) to really 
reinforce their product with their core users," Dr. Harris told The Wrap
 in a Nov. 25 article,
"Critics Slam 'Empire-Pepsi Deal as a 'Public Health Tragedy.'"  "The
 issue with that is that their product is hurting their core users. So 
it's probably good for their bottom line, but it's not good for the 
black community."
 
CNN carried a comprehensive piece entitled
"Kids seeing more unhealthy snack ads"  on our Snack FACTS report. 
The Nov. 2 article, accompanied by 10 photos of snack ads, quoted 
Dr. Harris on the targeting of black and Hispanic youth with ads for 
unhealthy snacks. "It's really an irresponsible practice
 ... given that these minority groups have higher rates of obesity, 
diabetes and weight-related conditions," Harris said. The CNN article 
was picked up by dozens of other media outlets around the country.
 
Coinciding with the Nov. 2 release of Snack FACTS at the American Public
 Health Association's annual meeting in Chicago, TV news segments and 
interviews with Dr. Harris were aired across the country, reaching 
millions of viewers in 49 markets. "Companies aren't helping
 parents who want to raise healthy kids and get their kids to enjoy the 
healthier snack foods, not the junk," she told
KFXV
 in Harlingen, TX, for example.
UConn
 Today reported on Snack Facts in a Nov. 2 article. Companies 
participating in the Children's Food and Beverage Advertising Initiative
 (CFBAI) have voluntarily pledged not to market unhealthy products like 
chips to children ages six to 12, and not to advertise
 to children under six at all. Despite these promises, children aged six
 to 11 saw 53 percent more TV ads in 2014 than 2010 for snack foods that
 companies pledged they would not advertise directly to children under 
12.
Many other publications covered Snack FACTS, including JET
 magazine, the 
Latin Post, 
The Daily Meal and 
Food Dive. The study was still getting media attention two week after its release in a piece in Fusion.
UConn Today  highlighted the
 Nov. 3 launch of the Continuing Medical Education (CME)  Course for health care providers to help reduce weight stigmatization in clinical settings.
 
Timed to coincide with the CME's launch, Rudd Center Deputy Director Rebecca Puhl wrote an article for
Medscape  on the inadequate provision of obesity care by health care 
professionals. "Education and training are clearly warranted to equip 
health care professionals with the appropriate knowledge and tools to 
care for patients with obesity and to do so without
 reinforcing or communicating bias and stigma," Dr. Puhl said in the 
Nov. 3 piece, entitled: Obesity: Treatment Options and Communication 
Strategies.
PR Newswire  reported
 Nov.
 6 on a new survey released by the Rudd Center and the Obesity Action 
Coalition. The survey of more than 73,000 U.S. adults conducted from 
2013 to 2015 showed that, "while there is public recognition that 
obesity-focused shaming and blaming is wrong, social
 acceptance of people affected by obesity has declined." Dr. Puhl noted,
 "This study highlights the need for societal-level efforts to broaden 
acceptance of people of diverse body sizes."
 
Dr. Puhl explained in a Nov. 11 article in The New York Times , "Is Fat Stigma Making Us Miserable?," that 
weight stigmatization and shaming, so common in our society, do not 
motivate people to lose weight. "Research shows that the opposite is 
true," Dr. Puhl said in the article. "Messages that shame,
 blame and stigmatize people about their weight have a negative impact 
and interfere with efforts to improve health."
 
A study co-authored by Tatiana Andreyeva, Rudd Center Director of 
Economic Initiatives, found that severe obesity cost the 50 states' 
Medicaid programs $8 billion a year, ranging from a low of $5 million in
 Wyoming to $1.3 billion in California. Published in
 the November edition of the journal Health Affairs , the
 study received media coverage Nov. 3 in Eureka Alert  and Healthcare Dive. |  |  
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What's Simmering with Our Friends
 
  
After hearing from many parents, Applebee's
 has become the first family-dining restaurant chain to agree to remove 
soda from its kids' menus. The move was praised by the
Center for Science in the Public Interest, 
MomsRising.org, the 
Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility, and the UConn Rudd 
Center, which together in 2014 launched a campaign to urge all 
restaurant chains to remove soda and other sugary drinks from their 
children's menus and meals. Applebee's follows fast-food
 chains McDonald's, Burger King, Wendy's and Dairy Queen.  
                                                    
  
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Rudd Center Employment Opportunities
 
 
Postdoctoral Fellow  
The UConn Rudd Center for Food Policy 
& Obesity invites applications for a Postdoctoral Fellow position 
beginning Summer 2016. Candidates will be expected to contribute to the 
research mission of the center addressing the topic
 of weight-related stigma. This is a full time, annually renewable 
position with a maximum duration of 2 years. This Postdoctoral Fellow 
will contribute to research on obesity-related stigma, bullying, and 
discrimination under Dr. Rebecca Puhl, Deputy Director
 of the Rudd Center, and Professor of Human Development & Family 
Studies. Responsibilities will include designing, conducting, and 
analyzing research studies, literature reviews, grant writing, and 
writing scientific papers.Job ID: 2016182 
Applications are due Dec. 15. 
For more information and to apply, click here.
Postdoctoral Fellow 
The UConn Rudd Center for Food Policy & Obesity invites applications
 for a Postdoctoral Fellow position beginning Summer 2016. Candidates 
will be expected to contribute to the research mission of the center 
addressing food insecurity, nutrition, and health
 disparities. This is a full time, annually renewable position with a 
maximum duration of 2 years. This Postdoctoral Fellow will contribute to
 research on food insecurity, nutrition and health disparities under Dr.
 Marlene Schwartz, the Rudd Center Director,
 and Professor of Human Development & Family Studies. 
Responsibilities include quantitative data collection, community 
engagement throughout the research process, data analyses, literature 
reviews, grant writing, and writing scientific papers.
Job ID: 2016183 
Applications are due Dec. 15. 
For more information and to apply, click here.
  
  
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