Tuesday, 7 February 2017

Public Interest Groups' Concerns about Gates Foundation's Role at World Health Organization

Saturday, 4 February 2017

Rudd Center News Letter January 2017


Beyond the Sugary Drinks Debate in SNAP - UConn Rudd Center newsletter
UConn Rudd Center for Food Policy & Obesity <daniel.p.jones@uconn.edu>
Tue 01-31, 11:26 AMYou
January 2017 Rudd Center Health Digest
View this email in your browser
January 2017 Newsletter
Share With A Friend - Sign Up for Our Newsletter Here

Rudd Center Recent Publications




Moving Beyond the Debate Over Restricting Sugary Drinks
in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program

Essay by UConn Rudd Center Director Marlene Schwartz
Published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine

 
"To address the dual problem of food insecurity and poor nutrition, the U.S. Department of Agriculture has recently revised the nutrition standards for nearly all of its federal food programs to align with the Dietary Guidelines for Americans. One notable exception is the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). Policy proposals to restrict SNAP benefits based on nutrition quality (e.g., excluding sugary drinks) have generated controversy and have polarized previous research and advocacy allies. This essay presents many of the issues that have emerged ...The purpose of this review is to increase mutual understanding and respect of different perspectives ..."


 

Study Examines Nutritional Quality
Of Preschoolers' Lunches Packed by Parents

 
One challenge relating to children's health is that preschool kids consume inadequate amounts of key nutrients. Understanding the contents of lunches packed by parents for their preschool children can help identify areas of opportunity for developing healthy food preferences at a young age. Maria J. Romo-Palafox, a UConn Rudd Center Postdoctoral Fellow, was the lead author on a study (conducted as part of her PhD work) to evaluate the nutritional quality of lunches packed by parents and consumed by children attending early care centers. The study, published in the Journal of the American College of Nutrition, found that parents of preschool children pack lunches that are low in calcium, potassium and fiber, and high in sodium, sugar and saturated fat. These findings can be used to guide improvements through targeted interventions.
 
 


Rudd Center in the News
 
Fat shaming - not lack of willpower - is why so many Americans struggle with their weight, a must-read Jan. 5 article in News.Mic, included references to research by UConn Rudd Center Deputy Director Rebecca Puhl, Director Marlene Schwartz, and Postdoctoral Fellow Mary Himmelstein.

ConscienHealth published a Jan. 24 article that featured the essay Dr. Schwartz wrote for the American Journal of Preventive Medicine on the debate over sugary drinks in SNAP. The article notes that she "does a fine job of explaining the need to move beyond these tortured debates toward workable solutions."

Dr. Schwartz was interviewed for a Jan. 19  U.S. News & World Report article, "The Obamas' Other Health Legacy," which described efforts under the Obama administration to reduce obesity, and asked, "What will happen under Donald Trump?"

Dr. Schwartz was also quoted in a Connecticut Health I-Team article (carried by The Hartford Courant and The New Haven Register as well) on a Mix of Programs Helping Low-Income Families Build Healthy Eating Habits in Connecticut.

Jennifer Harris, UConn Rudd Center Director of Marketing Initiatives, was interviewed Jan. 26 about marketing unhealthy food and beverages to children. She was a guest on the PRN radio show iEat Green, hosted by Bhavani Jaroff.

A Jan. 19 Philly.com blog post featured Baby Food FACTS, the recent report by Dr. Harris and her marketing team.

The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education included a Jan. 3 article on our recent study showing an increase in TV food and beverage ads viewed by youth under 18. The study found that black children and adolescents viewed more unhealthy food ads than white children and adolescents.

The UConn Rudd Center's 2015 Snack FACTS report was highlighted in a Jan. 9 True Viral News articleTV ads targeting children are causing them to eat more junk food.


Tufts/UConn RIDGE Center
Announces Request for Proposals



 
The Tufts/UConn Research Innovation and Development Grants in Economics (RIDGE) Center brings together the Friedman School of Nutrition and Policy at Tufts University and the Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity at the University of Connecticut. The RIDGE Center seeks to support innovative economic research on domestic nutrition assistance programs and to broaden a network of researchers applying their expertise to U.S. Department of Agriculture topics. The center seeks applications from a diverse community of experienced nutrition assistance researchers, graduate students, early career scholars, and established researchers who bring expertise in other research areas. Click here for details on applying.
 

What's Simmering With Our Friends

The Launch of a New Partnership:
Allies for Reaching Community Health Equity - ARCHE



 
ARCHE (Allies for Reaching Community Health Equity) is a new collaborative partnership between the Center for Global Policy Solutions and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation to advance equity-centered strategies that strengthen families and communities, and build a culture of health. A new ARCHE website offers online resources. These resources include a Jan. 11 report developed by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine and funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. This report, Communities in Action: Pathways to Health Equity "provides an unprecedented opportunity to create a national conversation around the importance of achieving health equity and to showcase your own work."
 

Rudd Center Legislation Database



 
Our database includes the latest legislation and policies from the 2017 state and congressional sessions. This database tracks state and federal policies related to access to healthy food, breastfeeding, farms and gardens, school nutrition, physical activity, food assistance programs, food marketing to children, menu and package labeling, and weight bias. Check it out here and request to receive our monthly legislation email update here.

 
News to Chew On
 

Facebook
Facebook
Twitter
Twitter
Website
Website
YouTube
YouTube
Copyright © 2017 UConn Rudd Center for Food Policy & Obesity, All rights reserved.
Thank you for subscribing to our newsletter.

Our mailing address is:
UConn Rudd Center for Food Policy & Obesity
One Constitution Plaza
Suite 600
Hartford, CT 06103

Add us to your address book


unsubscribe from this list    update subscription preferences

Email Marketing Powered by MailChimp

Monday, 4 July 2016

Health Digest - June 2016


Rudd Center Recent Publications
 

Teachers Say Improved Policies Needed to Address Weight-Based Bullying  

A new study by the Rudd Center for Food Policy & Obesity at the University of Connecticut found that teachers and administrators recognize weight-related bullying and eating disorders as problems in their schools that warrant improved prevention and interventions at the policy level. "Overall, findings indicate substantial support for a number of policy actions to address both of these problems in the student population," Rebecca Puhl, the lead author and Deputy Director of our Center, said in the Journal of School Health article. In particular, 85 to 94 percent of educators supported policies to reduce weight-based bullying in the school curriculum, improve anti-bullying policies to protect students from weight-based victimization, and train school staff how to address weight-based bullying. "Given that educators and school personnel are involved in the day-to-day implementation of school-based policies, it will be important to continue to engage their participation in policy remedies that can improve the health and safety of their students," Dr. Puhl concluded.
 
 

Rudd Center in the News
 
 
The New York Times quoted Rudd Center Deputy Director Rebecca Puhl in a June 16 Well blog by staff writer Roni Caryn Rabin, "Parents Should Avoid Comments on a Child's Weight." Dr. Puhl's comments were included in similar stories by other media outlets, including Ireland's Sunday World and the French edition of Slate.

In a June 16 story announcing that Philadelphia became the first major U.S. city to adopt a tax on sweetened beverages, Rudd Center Director Marlene Schwartz told Bloomberg news that sugary drinks are in a class by themselves as unhealthy products. "They are uniquely associated with excess calories, and they're empty calories. Even a cookie might have some sort of nutrition in it, but there's really zero nutrition in sugary drinks." Several other media outlets carried the article.

Dr. Schwartz was quoted June 20 in a Philadelphia Newsworks (public radio) piece that examined the impact on potential health benefits from including artificially sweetened diet soda in the city's sugary drink tax. "The science on diet beverages is not as clear," she said. "That's been the problem."

MedPage Today featured Dr. Schwartz among food policy and nutrition experts in a piece answering frequently asked questions about sugary drink taxes: "Friday Feedback: Should Nation Be Sweet on a Soda Tax?"

A June 20 Progressive Grocer article cited our Center's Snack FACTS report, released last November, showing that children saw substantially more TV ads for unhealthy snack foods in the previous five years, despite companies' promises to market healthier products to kids.

 

What's Simmering with Our Friends


Marie Bragg, a New York University Assistant Professor who studies food marketing, obesity and food policy, was the lead author on a study in Pediatrics showing that teen music stars in food and beverage commercials promoted mostly unhealthy products. These included high-calorie snack chips and chocolate, fast food, and sugary sodas. Bragg, who trained at the Rudd Center, was quoted on her findings in numerous media outlets, such as CNN and AP. She said it would be unrealistic to expect teens to eat only healthy foods or to expect music stars to endorse only healthy products. "Moderation" and "a better balance" of advertising would be ideal, Bragg told AP Medical Writer Lindsey Tanner.

 

Forum on Early Childhood Nutrition
 
   UConn Rudd Center Director Marlene Schwartz (left)
and CHDI President and CEO Judith Meyers
 
The Rudd Center partnered with the Child Health and Development Institute of Connecticut, Inc. (CHDI) and the UConn Health Center for Public Health and Health Policy (CPHHP) to host an early childhood food policy forum at the Rudd Center on June 14. More than 55 state officials, health professionals, researchers, advocates, and early care and education providers participated in the forum, entitled "Aligning Policy with Research: Promoting Sound Nutrition in Early Childhood." Rudd Center Director Marlene Schwartz opened the forum and provided an overview of the Child and Adult Care Food Program, a federal program that supports nutritious meals for infants and children in child care. Rudd Center Economic Initiatives Director Tatiana Andreyeva presented preliminary findings on her research on meals served in Connecticut childcare centers. Ann Ferris, Professor Emerita and former Director of the UConn Health Center for Public Health and Health Policy, presented her research on obesity prevention and early childcare policies. After the research presentations, CHDI President and CEO Judith Meyers gave an overview of recommendations included in a recent policy brief: Ensuring Children Grow Up at a Healthy Weight: Policy Opportunities to Prevent Obesity. She then invited panelists to join her in a facilitated discussion, which was followed by breakout sessions in which forum participants discussed specific actions for improving the nutrition environment in early childhood.
 
Professor Emerita Ann Ferris,
UConn Health Center for Public Health and Health Policy

 

New Online Graduate Course on Youth Bullying
Offered by Rudd Center's Professor Rebecca Puhl

 
Bullying is a common and complex problem facing today's children and adolescents. In a new UConn graduate course offered this fall by Professor Puhl, students will examine this multi-faceted problem and the role that peers, families, schools, media, culture, and government policies play in helping to reduce bullying in youth. The course will also examine the impact of bullying on children's health, evidence from school-based prevention and intervention programs, assessment of bullying, and laws and policies to address bullying. For more information about the course, click here.

 
                                     

This online course, called "Bullying and Victimization in Childhood and Adolescence" (HDFS 5002.001) is offered through UConn's eCampus and is open to graduate students both within and outside UConn. If you are interested and are not a UConn student, please visit: http://ecampus.uconn.edu/courses.php


 
Resources to Address Weight Bias
 
Improving Obesity Care Continuing Medical Education (CME) Course
 
Developed by the Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity and the University of Connecticut School of Medicine, this free, one-hour, online accredited course is for health professionals (clinicians, nurses, social workers and dietitians, and trainees) to improve the quality of care for patients with overweight and obesity, and help reduce weight stigmatization in clinical settings.

News to Chew On
 
Parents: See What's Happening at
Rudd 'Roots Parents


click here

 
Facebook
Facebook
Twitter
Twitter
Website
Website
YouTube
YouTube

Copyright © 2016 UConn Rudd Center for Food Policy & Obesity, All rights reserved.
Thank you for subscribing to our newsletter.

Our mailing address is:
UConn Rudd Center for Food Policy & Obesity
One Constitution Plaza
Suite 600
Hartford, CT 06103

Add us to your address book


unsubscribe from this list    update subscription preferences

Email Marketing Powered by MailChimp

Too many newsletters? You can unsubscribe.