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Exploring New Partnerships and Relationships with the Board on Human Sciences USDA Mary McPhail Gray, Ph.D. 202-694-5364 2/15/2010.

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Presentation on theme: "Exploring New Partnerships and Relationships with the Board on Human Sciences USDA Mary McPhail Gray, Ph.D. 202-694-5364 2/15/2010."— Presentation transcript:

1 Exploring New Partnerships and Relationships with the Board on Human Sciences USDA Mary McPhail Gray, Ph.D. MMGRAY@ers.usda.gov 202-694-5364 2/15/2010 The comments in this presentation are the ideas of the presenter and do not necessarily represent USDA.

2 »Top publ ic heal th Scie ntific evid enc e priority Major political issue Tools for schools Wellness policies H e a l t h i e r U S S c h o o l C h a l l e n g e s S O m a n y m e s s a g e s W h o ’ s t o b l a m e ? N u t r i t i o n s t a n d a r d s Change Has Happened … without thoughtful planning

3 Era of Urgency in Washington Specific visionary goal statements Expectation of comprehensive support for goals Emphasis on the “big picture” and simple messages Remarkable encouragement for collaboration

4 A New Era in Washington for Human Sciences President Obama declares an end to child hunger by 2015 Let’s Move Initiative to eliminate childhood obesity in a generation 2010 Child Nutrition Re-authorization Know Your Farmer, Know Your Food Initiative

5 ’08 Farm Bill Changes Transformation of Cooperative State Research, Education and Extension Service (CSREES) to National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) Appointment of Dr. Roger Beachy as the first Director of NIFA and the Chief Scientist for USDA

6 Opportunities for BoHS in all Mission Areas New emphasis on health Great recognition of need for systemic planning Integration of food production/processing/distribution/ consumption Tough assessment of environments of influence

7 National Institute of Food and Agriculture Institute of Youth, Family, and Community Institute of Food Production and Sustainability Institute of Bioenergy, Climate, and Environment Institute of Food Safety and Nutrition Center for International Programs http://www.nifa.usda.gov/newsroom/factsheet.pdf

8 NIFA Agriculture and Food Research Initiative (AFRI) 2010 Societal Challenge Areas Keep American agriculture competitive while ending world hunger Improve nutrition and end child obesity Improve food safety for all Americans Secure America’s energy future through renewable biofuels Mitigate and adapt agriculture to variations in climate

9 NIFA Commitments to Focus and Integration AFRI RFA’s will be issued in March Greater requirements for integrative projects; more funding for pre & post doctoral fellows Funding authority is available up to 10 years; initially 5 years will be practice Funding up to $25 million per project will be available

10 Asking Tough Questions Are our nutrition programs having the impacts we want? Are Americans healthier for all our investments in nutrition education? Is MyPyramid making a difference? Do we understand where we should invest to combat obesity?

11 Budget and Program Realities Food and Nutrition Services (FNS) accounts for 2/3 of USDA Budget: –$82.3 billion in 2010 –$94.4 billion in 2011 66% of eligible persons participate in SNAP; only 56% of Latinos do, 32% of the elderly NIFA Budget is $1.3 billion in 2010

12 USDA Programs Provide Critical Safety Net and Impacts 1 in 4 Americans participates in a USDA Food Program: –38.2 million adults and children participate in SNAP –31.2 million children eat school lunch –11 million eat school breakfast –2.2 million participate in summer feeding programs 7.1 million infants and children participate in WIC –50% of US infants receive WIC

13 New Era of USDA Program Enhancements and New Initiatives School Foods Standards-- New IOM Report New WIC Package 2010 Dietary Guidelines Re-thinking MyPyramid Child Nutrition Reauthorization Bill Enhanced HealthierUS Schools Challenge

14 History of USDA’s Food Guidance 1940s 1950s-1960s 1970 s 1992 2005 Food for Young Children 1916

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16 REALITY: MyPyramid Recommendations Compared to Consumption Increases Current Consumption Decreases Fruits Vegetables Grains Meat & Beans Milk Bars show percent change needed in consumption to meet recommendations

17 Responding to Obesity and Dietary Intake Data with Intention Starting internally such as enhancing USDA cafeteria offerings Enhancing School Meals and WIC Increasing participation of eligibles in nutrition safety net programs Enlisting private and public partners Marketing the Use of the Food Environment Atlas

18 Enhancements, cont. Promote Know Your Farmer, Know your Food: –Tactical Teams analysis –Encourage Farm to School Programs –Support local community food councils –Identify opportunities for cooperative extension to support community and school planning Healthy Food Financing Initiative in 2011 Adm. Budget will provide $400 million to bring grocery stores to underserved areas with Treasury/USDA/HHS collaboration

19 Enhancements, cont. Creative new ideas with federal partners: –HealthierUS Schools and Blue Ribbon Schools Collaboration –HHS stronger involvement in Physical Activity programs in schools and communities –Joint messaging and leadership for obesity reduction initiatives with ED, HHS, and CDC.

20 HealthierUS School Challenge* Reimbursable meal standards Competitive food standards inside and outside the cafeteria Participation rate standards Nutrition Education Physical Activity Wellness policies * Only 600 of 100,000 US schools participate

21 A New Era of Collaboration CSREES Reorganization into NIFA with cross-agency task forces USDA Cross Agency Initiatives: e.g. KYF2; Food Environment Atlas Cross-Departmental Initiatives: –Schools and Health Collaboration- ED/HHS/USDA –Obesity Reduction Joint Research-REE/NIH –NCORR-CDC/RWJ/Kellogg/USDA

22 Focus on fruits. Vary your veggies. Get your calcium-rich foods. Make half your grains whole. Go lean with protein. Know the limits on fats, salt, and sugars. Key food group messages from the Dietary Guidelines and MyPyramid:

23 Realizing the Vision of a Healthier US Will require creativity, collaboration and courage in –Research –Interventions and outreach –Education This community can play a key role in all of these efforts we need your input! THANK YOU!


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