John McDermott - Agriculture for improved nutrition and healthCGIAR Research ...WorldFish
A roadmap towards investing in agriculture, food security and nutrition. Presented at the Agriculture Nutrition Linkages Seminar in Dhaka, Bangladesh on the 18th of April, 2012.
ICN2-Nutrition policies:from 1992 ICN to 2014 ICN2FAO
Nutrition policies:from 1992 ICN to 2014 ICN2
Chizuru Nishida
Coordinator, Nutrition Policy and Scientific Advice
Department of Nutrition for Health and development
WHO/HQ
GCARD2: Briefing paper Household Nutrition Security (WFP)GCARD Conferences
While the research agenda is growing, there remains limited concrete evidence on how agriculture–nutrition linkages work. A mapping exercise has been completed by DFID/LCIRAH outlining the research gaps. However more nutrition-relevant data from agricultural interventions needs to be generated, collected and shared, and nutritional indicators need to be included in evaluations. LCIRAH identify the need for greater understanding of the pathways from agricultural inputs and practices through value chains to effects on food environment, consumption and nutrition.
Visit the conference site for more information: http://www.egfar.org/gcard-2012
Bien que les programmes de recherche se multiplient, il n'existe pas encore de preuves concrètes sur la façon dont les relations entre l’agriculture et la nutrition fonctionnent. Un état des lieux a été réalisé par DFID/LCIRAH montrant les lacunes de la recherche dans ce domaine. Cependant, d'importantes données nutritionnelles pertinentes doivent être générées, collectées et partagées ; et les indicateurs nutritionnels doivent être inclus dans les évaluations. LCIRAH identifie la nécessité pour une large compréhension des mécanismes depuis les intrants et pratiques agricoles, a travers les chaines de valeur et aux effets sur les aliments, la consommation et la nutrition.
Visitez le site de la GCARD2 pour plus d'informations: http://www.egfar.org/gcard-2012
Approaching sustainable urban development in China through a food system pla...Steffanie Scott
After more than two decades of rapid urbanization, Chinese cities now face severe sustainability challenges in terms of balancing economic viability, social justice, and environmental protection goals. While various types of planning have long been adopted to cope with these challenges, food as a centerpiece of daily life and of social and economic activity in cities has rarely been considered as a focus of urban planning in China, despite a lot of recent attention to food waste and food safety concerns. In contrast, over the past decade or more, cities in the west have seen food system planning emerge as a holistic lens to promote multifaceted urban development strategies. Community gardens and neighbourhood farmers’ markets are two common examples. In these strategies, food has been recognized as a powerful element that links closely with multiple economic, social, health, and environmental issues.
This paper thus calls for an integration of food issues into urban planning in Chinese cities. Our paper reviews some successful cases of food system assessments and planning in the west and provides a preliminary framework for food system planning in China. The framework brings together various priorities: connecting people to the food system, community economic development, access to healthy food, ecological health, and integrated food policy. By applying this framework to examine urban food systems in China, our paper identifies strengths and challenges for achieving sustainability goals. This analysis also sets the stage for future research in urban food system planning in China.
John McDermott - Agriculture for improved nutrition and healthCGIAR Research ...WorldFish
A roadmap towards investing in agriculture, food security and nutrition. Presented at the Agriculture Nutrition Linkages Seminar in Dhaka, Bangladesh on the 18th of April, 2012.
ICN2-Nutrition policies:from 1992 ICN to 2014 ICN2FAO
Nutrition policies:from 1992 ICN to 2014 ICN2
Chizuru Nishida
Coordinator, Nutrition Policy and Scientific Advice
Department of Nutrition for Health and development
WHO/HQ
GCARD2: Briefing paper Household Nutrition Security (WFP)GCARD Conferences
While the research agenda is growing, there remains limited concrete evidence on how agriculture–nutrition linkages work. A mapping exercise has been completed by DFID/LCIRAH outlining the research gaps. However more nutrition-relevant data from agricultural interventions needs to be generated, collected and shared, and nutritional indicators need to be included in evaluations. LCIRAH identify the need for greater understanding of the pathways from agricultural inputs and practices through value chains to effects on food environment, consumption and nutrition.
Visit the conference site for more information: http://www.egfar.org/gcard-2012
Bien que les programmes de recherche se multiplient, il n'existe pas encore de preuves concrètes sur la façon dont les relations entre l’agriculture et la nutrition fonctionnent. Un état des lieux a été réalisé par DFID/LCIRAH montrant les lacunes de la recherche dans ce domaine. Cependant, d'importantes données nutritionnelles pertinentes doivent être générées, collectées et partagées ; et les indicateurs nutritionnels doivent être inclus dans les évaluations. LCIRAH identifie la nécessité pour une large compréhension des mécanismes depuis les intrants et pratiques agricoles, a travers les chaines de valeur et aux effets sur les aliments, la consommation et la nutrition.
Visitez le site de la GCARD2 pour plus d'informations: http://www.egfar.org/gcard-2012
Approaching sustainable urban development in China through a food system pla...Steffanie Scott
After more than two decades of rapid urbanization, Chinese cities now face severe sustainability challenges in terms of balancing economic viability, social justice, and environmental protection goals. While various types of planning have long been adopted to cope with these challenges, food as a centerpiece of daily life and of social and economic activity in cities has rarely been considered as a focus of urban planning in China, despite a lot of recent attention to food waste and food safety concerns. In contrast, over the past decade or more, cities in the west have seen food system planning emerge as a holistic lens to promote multifaceted urban development strategies. Community gardens and neighbourhood farmers’ markets are two common examples. In these strategies, food has been recognized as a powerful element that links closely with multiple economic, social, health, and environmental issues.
This paper thus calls for an integration of food issues into urban planning in Chinese cities. Our paper reviews some successful cases of food system assessments and planning in the west and provides a preliminary framework for food system planning in China. The framework brings together various priorities: connecting people to the food system, community economic development, access to healthy food, ecological health, and integrated food policy. By applying this framework to examine urban food systems in China, our paper identifies strengths and challenges for achieving sustainability goals. This analysis also sets the stage for future research in urban food system planning in China.
This powerpoint discusses different aspects of a community food assessment. It also discusses the role of CED and food security. It compares food programming and CED in Manitoba with that in Saskatchewan
In support of the implementation of Tanzania's National Nutrition Strategy, the Mwanzo Bora Nutrition Program conducted an analysis of the Social and Behavior Change Communication (SBCC) Landscape for Nutrition. This presentation provides an overview of this work.
Gender in Agriculture for Nutrition and HealthIFPRI-PIM
This poster was presented by Hazel Malapit (A4NH / IFPRI) for the pre-Annual Scientific Conference meeting organized for the CGIAR research program gender research coordinators on 4 December.
The annual scientific conference of the CGIAR collaborative platform for gender research took place on 5-6 December 2017 in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, where the Platform is hosted (by KIT Royal Tropical Institute).
Read more: http://gender.cgiar.org/gender_events/annual-scientific-conference-capacity-development-workshop-cgiar-collaborative-platform-gender-research/
Purchasing Power: 10 Lessons on Getting More Local, Sustainable, and Deliciou...Rad Fsc
Food Secure Canada and the J.W. McConnell Family Foundation are jointly releasing the report Purchasing Power: 10 Lessons on Getting More Local, Sustainable, and Delicious Food in Schools, Hospitals and Campuses. The lessons profile what we’ve learned about how to shift institutional food purchasing to sustainability–from defining local, to leveraging contracts, to building food cultures, to policy change–and what the opportunities are for scaling this work.
Presentation used by Amanda Behrens, Project Manager at the John Hopkins Center for a Livable Future during the workshop titled "Knowing you Make a Difference: Community Food Security Assessment and Evaluation"
In Spring 2013, we are on the precipice of dramatic, disruptive change in the health field that offers an unprecedented opportunity and challenge to transform health care and population health.
We know that traditional public health approaches along with more and better health care are not enough to improve health outcomes, equity, and cost. We must also:
- implement sustainable, fundamental "upstream" changes that address the root causes of disease and disability; and
- transform the way we deliver health care to ensure access to quality, affordable health care for all.
Enjoy this Bright Spot presentation from Florence Simpson, Food Service Manager, Los Angeles Unified School District, and Ariana Oliva of the California Food Policy Advocates, which was presented at the 2013 Annual Leadership Conference, co-sponsored by the Center for Health Leadership (CHL) and the California Pacific Public Health Training Center (CALPACT) at UC Berkeley's School of Public Health.
To learn more about this event, please visit:
http://calpact.org/index.php/en/events/leadership-conference
Learn more about CALPACT:
http://calpact.org/
Learn more about the CHL:
http://chl.berkeley.edu/
Feed & Seed is a company located in Greenville, South Carolina. It's a collaborative effort from farmers, educators, policy makers, health experts, and many more to connect food from the farms to our tables.
Mainstreaming human nutrition in livestock interventions: Lessons learned fro...ILRI
Presented by Domitille Kauffmann and Paula Dominguez-Salas at a webinar on “The importance of products of animal origin in human nutrition” organized by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) Livestock Technical Network, 24 April 2015.
Power point presentation used during the Menu of Change: Healthy Food in Health Care workshop. Presentation given by Roberta Anderson (Food Alliance), Suzanne Briggs (Kaiser Permanente), Eecole Copen (Oregon Health and Science University Food and Nutrition Services) and Emma Sirois (Oregon Center for Environmental Health).
This powerpoint discusses different aspects of a community food assessment. It also discusses the role of CED and food security. It compares food programming and CED in Manitoba with that in Saskatchewan
In support of the implementation of Tanzania's National Nutrition Strategy, the Mwanzo Bora Nutrition Program conducted an analysis of the Social and Behavior Change Communication (SBCC) Landscape for Nutrition. This presentation provides an overview of this work.
Gender in Agriculture for Nutrition and HealthIFPRI-PIM
This poster was presented by Hazel Malapit (A4NH / IFPRI) for the pre-Annual Scientific Conference meeting organized for the CGIAR research program gender research coordinators on 4 December.
The annual scientific conference of the CGIAR collaborative platform for gender research took place on 5-6 December 2017 in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, where the Platform is hosted (by KIT Royal Tropical Institute).
Read more: http://gender.cgiar.org/gender_events/annual-scientific-conference-capacity-development-workshop-cgiar-collaborative-platform-gender-research/
Purchasing Power: 10 Lessons on Getting More Local, Sustainable, and Deliciou...Rad Fsc
Food Secure Canada and the J.W. McConnell Family Foundation are jointly releasing the report Purchasing Power: 10 Lessons on Getting More Local, Sustainable, and Delicious Food in Schools, Hospitals and Campuses. The lessons profile what we’ve learned about how to shift institutional food purchasing to sustainability–from defining local, to leveraging contracts, to building food cultures, to policy change–and what the opportunities are for scaling this work.
Presentation used by Amanda Behrens, Project Manager at the John Hopkins Center for a Livable Future during the workshop titled "Knowing you Make a Difference: Community Food Security Assessment and Evaluation"
In Spring 2013, we are on the precipice of dramatic, disruptive change in the health field that offers an unprecedented opportunity and challenge to transform health care and population health.
We know that traditional public health approaches along with more and better health care are not enough to improve health outcomes, equity, and cost. We must also:
- implement sustainable, fundamental "upstream" changes that address the root causes of disease and disability; and
- transform the way we deliver health care to ensure access to quality, affordable health care for all.
Enjoy this Bright Spot presentation from Florence Simpson, Food Service Manager, Los Angeles Unified School District, and Ariana Oliva of the California Food Policy Advocates, which was presented at the 2013 Annual Leadership Conference, co-sponsored by the Center for Health Leadership (CHL) and the California Pacific Public Health Training Center (CALPACT) at UC Berkeley's School of Public Health.
To learn more about this event, please visit:
http://calpact.org/index.php/en/events/leadership-conference
Learn more about CALPACT:
http://calpact.org/
Learn more about the CHL:
http://chl.berkeley.edu/
Feed & Seed is a company located in Greenville, South Carolina. It's a collaborative effort from farmers, educators, policy makers, health experts, and many more to connect food from the farms to our tables.
Mainstreaming human nutrition in livestock interventions: Lessons learned fro...ILRI
Presented by Domitille Kauffmann and Paula Dominguez-Salas at a webinar on “The importance of products of animal origin in human nutrition” organized by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) Livestock Technical Network, 24 April 2015.
Power point presentation used during the Menu of Change: Healthy Food in Health Care workshop. Presentation given by Roberta Anderson (Food Alliance), Suzanne Briggs (Kaiser Permanente), Eecole Copen (Oregon Health and Science University Food and Nutrition Services) and Emma Sirois (Oregon Center for Environmental Health).
This PolicyLink presentation goes over the basics of food policy councils: what they are, how they function, what they're good at, and what's challenging for them.
Bringing Fruit & Vegetable Prescription Programs to Detroitnicolaliz
Fruit and vegetable prescription programs have become innovative partnerships between healthcare and community food providers – connecting patients to fresh, healthy, locally-grown produce while providing direct economic benefits to small & midsize farmers and the community. Learn about the first ever pilot program in Detroit, Michigan. Visit http://www.ecocenter.org/healthy-food/fruit-vegetable-prescriptions to learn more.
9 February 2017, the first Food for All Talk (#FFATalks) under the WBG-Netherlands Partnership took place on the subject: Food Systems for Healthier Diets.
Graduate student Pamela Mukaire discusses a project to help people in two Southern California communities reduce their risk of diseases related to diet and lifestyle, such as diabetes and hypertension through increased access to nutritious food and community gardening.
Engaging Social Entrepreneurs in Community-Based Participatory Solutions to F...Carolyn Zezima
2012 ASFS/AFHVS/SAFN Conference Global Gateways and Local Connections: Cities, Agriculture, and the Future of Food Systems
Carolyn Zezima, Director of Food and Nutrition Initiatives, Communities IMPACT Diabetes Center at Mount Sinai School of Medicine
Despite increasing recognition that fresh, healthy, local foods are scarce in low-income communities, and the creation of a number of healthy food initiatives targeting these communities, historically underserved communities still lack novel, profitable, and sustainable businesses that supply healthy, affordable and taste-satisfying foods. Bringing together the business and public health sectors, Communities IMPACT Diabetes Center at Mount Sinai School of Medicine invited business students to submit concepts and plans for viable, market and community-driven business solutions to one of our most pressing public health needs: healthy, affordable food in underserved communities. The proposed enterprises must have served communities with limited availability to healthy foods, be tailored to the particular assets and challenges in the communities, and must be developed in consultation with target communities. Proposals were judged by a panel of experts in business, food and local government. Teams competed for $25,000 in start-up funds and other business support services.
Community engagement and policy advocacy approaches to obesity and chronic disease prevention
Présentation de Kim Raine au colloque "Recherche interventionnelle contre le cancer : Réunir chercheurs, décideurs et acteurs de terrain » - 17 et 18 novembre 2014, BnF, Paris
Gender in the CGIAR Research Program on Agriculture for Nutrition and Health ...CGIAR
This poster was presented by Hazel Malapit (PIM), as part of the Gender Research Coordinators' meeting (4 December 2017), related to Annual Scientific Conference hosted by the CGIAR Collaborative Platform for Gender Research. The event took place on 5-6 December 2017 in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, where the Platform is hosted (by KIT Royal Tropical Institute).
Read more: http://gender.cgiar.org/gender_events/annual-scientific-conference-capacity-development-workshop-cgiar-collaborative-platform-gender-research/
Obesity and overweight measures to help lose weight and community strategies ...Prab Tumpati
As the nation fights an epidemic of Obesity, here are some of the measures at the level of the community from Centers For Disease Control.
If you are overweight or obese and trying to lose weight, you are not alone. According to statistics, up to 70 percent of the adult population in the United States are either overweight or obese. Our countries approach of blaming the victim for obesity does not help.
Please feel free to share this free, public domain information.
Thank you.
W8MD Medical Weight Loss Centers
Towards Precepts of Food System Sustainability - Presentation by Hallie Eakin. This presentation was given as part of the 'Metrics of Sustainable Diets and Food Systems Symposiumco-organized by Bioversity International and CIHEAM-IAMM, November 4th -5th 2014, Agropolis International, Montpellier
Visit 'Metrics of Sustainable Diets and Food Systems' Symposium webpage.
http://www.bioversityinternational.org/metrics-sustainable-diets-symposium/
A Conversation with the Dean of the Tufts School of Human Nutrition. 9-17-15 Recording here: https://www.dropbox.com/s/8qly017hyhct6ut/Darius%20Tufts%20Nutrition%20Talk.m4a?dl=0
From Farm to Fork: The 20 year journey of the Center for Environmental Farmin...CIAT
Speaker: Prof. John O’Sullivan, former director of CEFS- the Center for Environmental Farming Systems- (http://www.cefs.ncsu.edu), North Carolina State University
"Putting Dietary Guidelines for Americans to Work! Multifactorial Approaches ...ExternalEvents
"www.fao.org/about/meetings/sustainable-food-systems-nutrition-symposium
The International Symposium on Sustainable Food Systems for Healthy Diets and Improved Nutrition was jointly held by FAO and WHO in December 2016 to explore policies and programme options for shaping the food systems in ways that deliver foods for a healthy diet, focusing on concrete country experiences and challenges. This Symposium waas the first large-scale contribution under the UN Decade of Action for Nutrition 2016-2025. This presentation was part of Parallel session 2.2: Information and education for healthy food behaviours"
Food and Diet: How Can Economics Contribute to Better Outcomes?lunnevehr
Seminar to Goettingen Global Food RTG, September 19, 2013. An overview of U.S. anti-obesity policies and the lessons for countries now going through the dietary transition.
Similar to Operationalizing Food Service Guidelines to Create a Healthier Food Environment with Joel Kimmons (20)
Place matters for health! A growing body of research over the last several decades has shown the connections between place and health. From obesity and chronic disease to depression, social isolation, or increased exposure to environmental toxins and pollutants, a person’s zip code can be a more reliable determinant of health than their genetic code.
In 2016, Project for Public Spaces compiled a report of peer-reviewed research that found key factors linking pubic spaces and peoples’ health. And public spaces are more than just parks and plazas – our streets represent the largest area of public space a community has!
This webinar will introduce participants to the placemaking process, the research behind the findings linking place and health, and how to envision streets as places – not just their function in transporting people and goods, but the vital role they play in animating the social and economic life of communities.
Using case problems, this webinar will give attendees real-world examples of workplace wellness situations and help attendees learn from those situations so that they can design and implement a compliant wellness program. Through case problems, attendees will review compliance mistakes concerning HIPAA, ACA, GINA, ADA, FLSA, data privacy and tax laws. Participants will learn how to use those laws to build a better workplace wellness program.
Learning Objectives:
* Understand how to apply laws to specific factual situations.
* Identify red flags in certain common workplace wellness practices.
* Learn the basics of HIPAA, ACA, GINA, ADA, FLSA, data privacy and tax laws as those laws relate to workplace wellness programs.
Looking for a healthier investment strategy? A new study by The Health Project (THP) finds that a portfolio of stock in companies that have won the prestigious C. Everett Koop National Health Award -- recognizing effective workplace health promotion programs -- has significantly outperformed the Standard & Poor's (S&P) 500 Index over the past 14 years. Since 2000, investing in Koop Award winners would have produced more than double the returns of the S&P 500, according to the new research led by THP President and CEO Dr. Ron Goetzel. Tune in to this webinar to hear more about this and related studies.
This webinar will discuss the prevalence of pre-diabetes and it’s contributing factors and the initial efforts to translate the National Diabetes Prevention Program to public health. We will also look at new approaches to providing interventions.
Learning objectives:
Scope and scale of pre-diabetes and what factors contribute to it.
Review initial efforts to translate the DPP to public health.
New approaches to providing interventions.
About The Presenter
Dr. Marrero received a B.A. (1974), M.A. (1978) and Ph.D. (1982) in Social Ecology from the University of California, Irvine. He joined the IU School of Medicine in 1984 and became the J.O. Ritchey Professor of Medicine in 2004. He was a member of the Diabetes Research & Training Center and served as Director of the Diabetes Prevention and Control Division. He is currently the Director of the Diabetes Translational Research Center. Dr. Marrero is an expert in the field of clinical trails in diabetes and translation research which moves scientific advances obtained in clinical trails into the public health sector. He helped design the Diabetes Prevention Program and the TRIAD study, which evaluated strategies to improve diabetes care delivery in managed care settings. His research interests include strategies for promoting diabetes prevention, care settings, improving diabetes care practices used by primary care providers, and the use of technology to facilitate care and education. Dr. Marrero was twice awarded the Allene Von Son Award for Diabetes Patient Education Tools by the American Association of Diabetes Educators, nominated to Who’s Who in Medicine and Health care in 2000, served as Associate Editor for Diabetes Care (1997-2002) and is currently the Associate Editor for Diabetes Forecast. He was selected as Alumni of the Year for University of California Irvine in 2006 and The Outstanding Educator in Diabetes in 2008 by the American Diabetes Association. He is the current President of the American Diabetes Association.
John Weaver, Psy.D. is a Licensed Psychologist who received his Doctor of Psychology degree from the Wisconsin School of Professional Psychology. He also has a Master of Science degree in Clinical Psychology from Marquette University and a Master of Divinity degree from St. Francis School of Pastoral Ministry.
CDC will provide an overview of their WorkLife Wellness Office services and describe how they used the HealthLead accreditation process to provide a framework to assess the comprehensiveness of their new office and existing programs and processes. Also, how the scoring of framework identified strengths and weaknesses and how the assessment plan of action is used for future strategic planning to drive new connections, data sources, and programmatic gaps as they strive to achieve HealthLead Silver. CDC will share specific examples of what was required and shared as part of the HealthLead audit during the presentation.
The way you communicate, and what you communicate, shapes how your employees feel about working there. Yet organizations often fail to prioritize corporate communication, to the detriment of their entire workplace culture.
Regular communication with employees sends the message that you value them as whole people. And consistent, meaningful communication can strengthen the employee-employer relationship. And when that relationship is strong, everyone wins: the employees, the employer, and the customers, clients, or patients.
You’ll come away from this webinar with immediately-useful tips and insider tricks from our 30+ years of experience producing engaging employee communications and leave with a blueprint of how to produce your own communications, or evaluate a vendor’s options, plus creative options.
We are reminded of the risk of workplace violence every time we hear of a tragic shooting on the news. As wellness professionals, we often have a broad contact with individuals who are struggling and with the structures of organizations that can have an influence on whether those individuals get help or act out their anger and frustration. In this session we will look at risk factors that can be identified to indicate that an individual needs additional assessment and help and at the organizational structures that can be implemented to reduce the risk of violence in your workplace. It is important that, as wellness professionals, we look at how to address this extreme form of unhealthy behavior.
Wellness is who we are, not what we do. As Oklahoma State University’s Chief Wellness Officer, Dr. Suzy Harrington shares a comprehensive, evidence based, wellness strategy model, driving America’s Healthiest Campus®. This model is transferrable to any setting to strategize the collaboration and vision for students, employees, and in the communities in which we live, learn, work, play, and pray. In addition to the model, Dr. Harrington will share the foundational structures that must be in place to support a sustainable culture of wellness.
Have you ever wondered why it is that even people who desperately want to adopt healthier lifestyles don’t stick with them once their initial burst of motivation fades? This provocative webinar will discuss the surprising reasons this is true and also showcase a new science-based paradigm to motivate healthy behavior so it is maintained over time. Dr. Michelle Segar will explain why logic-based reasons for behavior change (e.g., better heath, disease prevention, etc.) keep people stuck in cycles of starting and stopping but not behavioral sustainability. Using story and science, she will describe an easy-to-adopt, novel approach to promoting health, wellness, and fitness behaviors that leading organizations are starting to adopt. Attendees will leave this webinar with a more strategic way to communicate about and promote the sustainable behavior necessary for achieving improved health and well-being.
This webinar will discuss the major federal laws that impact workplace wellness program design, including the Affordable Care Act/HIPAA Nondiscrimination rules on the use of financial incentives, the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act (GINA), federal tax laws as well as recent EEOC action such as the proposed ADA rules and lawsuits against Honeywell, Flambeau and Orion Energy Systems. Through case examples, the speaker will explain how each of these laws interact with one another, who enforces these laws, what to expect in terms of future guidance, and how health promotion professionals can use these laws as tools in designing more effective and inclusive workplace wellness programs.
Are you looking to refresh your current workplace wellness program or have you thought about starting a workplace wellness program and don't know where to begin? Check out Workplace Wellness 2.0. In 60 minutes, you'll learn the 10 easy steps to create an inexpensive, community-based, volunteer-managed, thriving wellness initiative. Hope Health's managing editor, Jen Cronin, will walk you through the effective strategy based on the custom publisher's 30-plus years of working with hundreds of organizations and their workplace wellness efforts.
Learning Objectives:
How to begin a new program, or add new life to an existing wellness program, with the Workplace Wellness 2.0 concepts
How to take advantage of inexpensive, free and readily available resources to power your wellness program
How to create a program WITH employees vs. FOR employees.
About The Presenter
Jen Cronin
Managing Editor
Hope Health
An avid runner and foodie, Jen's goal is to help others embrace — and enjoy — a healthful lifestyle by creating inspiring, engaging, and fun content that focuses on simple ways people can take care of their mind, body, and spirit. Jen has more than 18 years of writing, editing, and communications project management experience. She has worked as a health reporter, a public relations specialist at a major medical school, and a marketing communications consultant for a Blue Cross Blue Shield affiliate before coming to HOPE Health in 2009.
Samantha Harden discuss provides an overview of the RE_AIM framework which evaluates the effectiveness of interventions based on the following five dimensions:
Reach into the target population
Effectiveness or efficacy
Adoption by target settings, institutions and staff
Implementation - consistency and cost of delivery of intervention
Maintenance of intervention effects in individuals and settings over time.
We will also practice using RE-AIM in planning, implementation, and evaluation and share resources available on RE-AIM.org.
Learning Objectives
1. Understand the five RE-AIM dimensions
2. Practice using RE-AIM for planning, implementation, and evaluation
3. Explore available resources found at RE-AIM.org
Simply applying knowledge we have reliably in hand, we could prevent fully 80% of all chronic disease and premature death in modernized and modernizing countries. Standing between us and that prize is an obstacle course of competing claims, false promises, and profit-driven, pop culture nonsense. The case will be made for True Health Coalition to rally diverse voices to the cause of using what we know, even as we pursue what we do not. The challenges, operations, and promise of the endeavor will be discussed.
Shannon Polly will lead a webinar on teaching tangible techniques and exercises that help people cultivate presence. The hour-long webinar will also include information on what science is telling us about presence. Shannon Polly brings both her expertise as a professional actor, playwright and Broadway producer and her background in positive psychology as a teacher, facilitator and coach to this somatic approach to well-being and thriving.
“It’s a common myth that you either have ‘executive presence’ – that essence that helps you to command a room – or you don’t”, says Polly, “but that is simply not true. As an actor, I know there are tricks and techniques, and as a Positive Psychology Expert, I also know that how you carry yourself physically has a big impact.”
More from HPCareer.Net / State of Wellness Inc. (20)
Knee anatomy and clinical tests 2024.pdfvimalpl1234
This includes all relevant anatomy and clinical tests compiled from standard textbooks, Campbell,netter etc..It is comprehensive and best suited for orthopaedicians and orthopaedic residents.
- Video recording of this lecture in English language: https://youtu.be/lK81BzxMqdo
- Video recording of this lecture in Arabic language: https://youtu.be/Ve4P0COk9OI
- Link to download the book free: https://nephrotube.blogspot.com/p/nephrotube-nephrology-books.html
- Link to NephroTube website: www.NephroTube.com
- Link to NephroTube social media accounts: https://nephrotube.blogspot.com/p/join-nephrotube-on-social-media.html
Title: Sense of Taste
Presenter: Dr. Faiza, Assistant Professor of Physiology
Qualifications:
MBBS (Best Graduate, AIMC Lahore)
FCPS Physiology
ICMT, CHPE, DHPE (STMU)
MPH (GC University, Faisalabad)
MBA (Virtual University of Pakistan)
Learning Objectives:
Describe the structure and function of taste buds.
Describe the relationship between the taste threshold and taste index of common substances.
Explain the chemical basis and signal transduction of taste perception for each type of primary taste sensation.
Recognize different abnormalities of taste perception and their causes.
Key Topics:
Significance of Taste Sensation:
Differentiation between pleasant and harmful food
Influence on behavior
Selection of food based on metabolic needs
Receptors of Taste:
Taste buds on the tongue
Influence of sense of smell, texture of food, and pain stimulation (e.g., by pepper)
Primary and Secondary Taste Sensations:
Primary taste sensations: Sweet, Sour, Salty, Bitter, Umami
Chemical basis and signal transduction mechanisms for each taste
Taste Threshold and Index:
Taste threshold values for Sweet (sucrose), Salty (NaCl), Sour (HCl), and Bitter (Quinine)
Taste index relationship: Inversely proportional to taste threshold
Taste Blindness:
Inability to taste certain substances, particularly thiourea compounds
Example: Phenylthiocarbamide
Structure and Function of Taste Buds:
Composition: Epithelial cells, Sustentacular/Supporting cells, Taste cells, Basal cells
Features: Taste pores, Taste hairs/microvilli, and Taste nerve fibers
Location of Taste Buds:
Found in papillae of the tongue (Fungiform, Circumvallate, Foliate)
Also present on the palate, tonsillar pillars, epiglottis, and proximal esophagus
Mechanism of Taste Stimulation:
Interaction of taste substances with receptors on microvilli
Signal transduction pathways for Umami, Sweet, Bitter, Sour, and Salty tastes
Taste Sensitivity and Adaptation:
Decrease in sensitivity with age
Rapid adaptation of taste sensation
Role of Saliva in Taste:
Dissolution of tastants to reach receptors
Washing away the stimulus
Taste Preferences and Aversions:
Mechanisms behind taste preference and aversion
Influence of receptors and neural pathways
Impact of Sensory Nerve Damage:
Degeneration of taste buds if the sensory nerve fiber is cut
Abnormalities of Taste Detection:
Conditions: Ageusia, Hypogeusia, Dysgeusia (parageusia)
Causes: Nerve damage, neurological disorders, infections, poor oral hygiene, adverse drug effects, deficiencies, aging, tobacco use, altered neurotransmitter levels
Neurotransmitters and Taste Threshold:
Effects of serotonin (5-HT) and norepinephrine (NE) on taste sensitivity
Supertasters:
25% of the population with heightened sensitivity to taste, especially bitterness
Increased number of fungiform papillae
These lecture slides, by Dr Sidra Arshad, offer a quick overview of the physiological basis of a normal electrocardiogram.
Learning objectives:
1. Define an electrocardiogram (ECG) and electrocardiography
2. Describe how dipoles generated by the heart produce the waveforms of the ECG
3. Describe the components of a normal electrocardiogram of a typical bipolar lead (limb II)
4. Differentiate between intervals and segments
5. Enlist some common indications for obtaining an ECG
6. Describe the flow of current around the heart during the cardiac cycle
7. Discuss the placement and polarity of the leads of electrocardiograph
8. Describe the normal electrocardiograms recorded from the limb leads and explain the physiological basis of the different records that are obtained
9. Define mean electrical vector (axis) of the heart and give the normal range
10. Define the mean QRS vector
11. Describe the axes of leads (hexagonal reference system)
12. Comprehend the vectorial analysis of the normal ECG
13. Determine the mean electrical axis of the ventricular QRS and appreciate the mean axis deviation
14. Explain the concepts of current of injury, J point, and their significance
Study Resources:
1. Chapter 11, Guyton and Hall Textbook of Medical Physiology, 14th edition
2. Chapter 9, Human Physiology - From Cells to Systems, Lauralee Sherwood, 9th edition
3. Chapter 29, Ganong’s Review of Medical Physiology, 26th edition
4. Electrocardiogram, StatPearls - https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK549803/
5. ECG in Medical Practice by ABM Abdullah, 4th edition
6. Chapter 3, Cardiology Explained, https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK2214/
7. ECG Basics, http://www.nataliescasebook.com/tag/e-c-g-basics
- Video recording of this lecture in English language: https://youtu.be/kqbnxVAZs-0
- Video recording of this lecture in Arabic language: https://youtu.be/SINlygW1Mpc
- Link to download the book free: https://nephrotube.blogspot.com/p/nephrotube-nephrology-books.html
- Link to NephroTube website: www.NephroTube.com
- Link to NephroTube social media accounts: https://nephrotube.blogspot.com/p/join-nephrotube-on-social-media.html
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Operationalizing Food Service Guidelines to Create a Healthier Food Environment with Joel Kimmons
1. Operationalizing Food Service
Guidelines to Create a Healthier
Food Environment
Joel Kimmons, Ph.D.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity and Obesity
The conclusions in this presentation are those of the
author and do not necessarily represent the views of
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
2. • Food Service Guidelines at the Department of Defense
• Jennifer Wallinger, Navy DoD
• Healthier Food Choices for Public Places
• Katherine Bishop, Center for Science in the Public Interest
• Part of the Solution: National Association of Blind Merchants
• Kevan Worley, National Association of Blind Merchants
3. Making Healthy Choices…
Default, Convenient, Easy, Immediate
Individual and Family Environment
Exposure, norms Policy Access
Skills, knowledge Legislation Advertising
Use of time Economics Affordability
Individuality Healthy
eating and
physical
activity
Social structures,
cultural norms, values
4. Food Service Guidelines
Definition Purpose
Food and beverage standards Construct a food environment
and other information for where the norm is
operating institutional food
service • Healthy dietary choices
• Sourcing • Enviromentally sustainable
• Purchasing and ethical methods
• Preparing • Equity throughout
• Presenting
• Serving
• Selling
5. Health and Sustainability
• Atmosphere • Building design and facilities
• Architecture • Energy use
• Cleaning • Waste
• Serving ware • Cleaning materials
• Cooking methods • Packaging
• Foods offered • Serving ware
• Sourcing of foods
A sustainable food system—
Integrates production, processing, distribution, and consumption
Regenerates rather than degrades natural resources
Is socially just and accessible
Supports the development of local communities
6. Apply Where Food is Sold,
Served, or Consumed
Settings
Federal, state, local governments
Targets
School systems
Worksites Cafeterias
Hospitals Snack bars
Institutionalized populations Vending
Assisted-living communities Lunch rooms
Colleges and universities Meetings
Community‐based organizations Conferences
(including faith‐based)
Day care centers
7. Developing Standards for
Food Service Guidelines
• Food
• Nutrient levels
• Other aspects of foods (ingredients, contents, contaminants, adulterants,
additives, etc)
• Methods of production (organic, local, ethical)
• Method of preparation (frying)
• Required Percentage of foods offered
• Marketing
• Pricing strategies
• Cafeteria layout, food presentation, choice architecture
• Menu labeling
• Other
8. Health and Sustainability Guidelines for
Federal Concessions and Vending
Operations (HHS/GSA Guidelines)
• Increase healthy and sustainable food and beverage choices and
practices at federal worksites
• Collaborative team: Health and Human Services (HHS) and
General Services Administration (GSA)
• Translate evidence-based recommendations into food service
practices
– Align food choices with the Dietary Guidelines for Americans,
2010
• http://www.cdc.gov/chronicdisease/resources/guidelines/food-
service-guidelines.htm
9. Operationalizing
Food Service Guideline
How do we establish standards as part of the basic operation of food service?
• Guidelines? standards? policy?
• Rate and methods of implementation—Gradual, gentle, flexible
• Increasing access to and choice of healthier foods
• Food vs. nutrient level
• Choice vs. restriction
• Choice architecture
• Pricing strategies
• Menu labeling
• Marketing campaigns
• Increase on-site access – farmers markets, CSAs
• Working with stakeholder
• Appropriately targeted for population and setting
• Organizational support
10. Operationalizing
Food Service Guidelines
Stakeholders—producers, suppliers, managers,
contracting officers, vendors, dietitians, employees, and
consumers
• The health case
• Size • The business case
• Culture • Economic situations
• Nature • Societal needs
• Management structure • Cultural acceptability
• Environmental issues
• Overall sustainability
11. HHS/GSA Guidelines
National Prevention Strategy
• Achieving access to healthy, affordable food within National
Prevention Council departments and (voluntarily) with
partners as appropriate
• 17 federal agencies Including the DOD
States, cities, and communities
• CTG
• CPPW
• Currently model guidelines for at least 12 states
Highlighted in the HHSinnovates award program
Full report on the development and initial contracts available
12. HHS/GSA Guidelines
First contract: HHS Humphrey Building Cafeteria, Washington,
D.C.
• Revenues are up
Nationwide: In the contracts at 28 facilities managed by GSA by
the end of 2013. Additionally, 25 GSA commercial
cafeteria operators are voluntarily using guidelines.
GSA National Capital Region: More than 20-million
annual transactions
CDC facilities in Atlanta are mostly in line with the guidelines
13. Implementing HHS/GSA Guidelines at CDC
Connecting the
right people
Leadership
Office of Sustainability Staff, Go Green Get Healthy
Customers
Management Analysis,
Service Operations
14. Health and Sustainability Guidelines
for Institutional Food Service
Direct
• Influence individuals by changing the food environment
• Adults spend considerable time at work as do children in school
• More than 100 million Americans eat at work daily1,2
Indirect
• Influence family behavior and community norms
System
• Couple the production and demand of healthy foods
• Develop social structures and cultural norms and values
1 Bureau of Labor Statistics
2 Linnan L, Bowling M, Childress J, et al. Results of the 2004 National
Worksite Health Promotion Survey. Am J Public Health. 2008;98(8):1503-9.
15. Resources
HHS and GSA Health and Sustainability Guidelines for Federal Concessions and
Vending Operations
http://www.cdc.gov/chronicdisease/resources/guidelines/food-service-guidelines.htm
GSA: Concessions and Cafeterias: Healthy Food in the Federal Workplace
http://www.gsa.gov/portal/content/104429
www.health.gov/dietaryguidelines
http://www.cdc.gov/nutritionreport/
www.nutrition.gov
16. DoD Food Service Guidelines
Menu Standards
Food Acquisition Standards
Color-coding Food Identification
Nutrition Environment Assessment
• Action Plan Toolkits
18. Healthier Food Choices for
Public Places
Katie Bishop, M.S., M.P.H.
Nutrition Policy Associate
www.cspinet.org/nutritionpolicy
19. What is healthier food choices for
public places?
• Implementing food and nutrition standards
for food sold or served in public places
• National, state, and local government
property
– Government buildings, parks, high rest
stops, libraries
– Corrections, child care, senior centers,
homeless shelters
• Workplaces, hospitals, universities
20. Why get healthier food in public
places?
• Two-thirds of Americans are overweight or obese,
which contributes to heart disease, diabetes,
cancer, etc.
• Diet-related diseases, such as diabetes, stroke, and
osteoporosis, are leading causes of disabilities.
– For example, nationally, 12,000 to 24,000
people with diabetes become blind each year.
• Americans not as healthy as
they could be
21. Why get healthier food in public
places?
• Helps makes healthier options available
• Emerging as a promising low cost public health
strategy
• Model for healthy eating
• Help shape social norms
• Helps governments and organizations to “walk the
walk”
• Ultimately impact food manufacturers
22. What Does CSPI Do?
• Provide support and technical assistance to
state, localities, and other venues to
implement policies for healthier food
choices for public places
• National Alliance for Nutrition and Activity
(NANA) developed Model Vending Standards
– Includes nutrition, labeling, pricing, placement,
and promotion standards
– List of products the meet the standards
– Gathering revenue data
23. Future Plans
• Guidelines for meeting and
conferences
• Nutrition standards for concessions
and cafeterias
24. For More Information
• http://www.cspinet.org/nutritionpolicy/foodstand
ards.html
– Model standards
– Model policies
– Our resources
– Links to resources
• Email: kbishop@cspinet.org
25. National Association of Blind
Merchants
• National Association of Blind Merchants (NABM)
– Membership organization of blind persons employed in either
self-employment work or the Randolph-Sheppard Vending
Program.
– NABM provides information regarding rehabilitation, social
security, tax, and other issues which directly affect blind
merchants and their vending businesses.
• NABM intends to work with stakeholders and be
at the forefront of healthy concessions initiatives.
• www.blindmerchants.org