Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byMaximo Yaw Modified over 9 years ago
1
Food Standards Agency Nutrition Research Dr Andrew Wadge Chief Scientist Food Standards Agency June 2008
2
Diet related chronic disease in UK Cardiovascular disease is the main cause of death: accounting for just under 238,000 deaths in 2002. Cancer accounted for over 159,000 deaths in 2002. 1/3 all deaths attributed to diet
3
FSA 2005-2010 Strategic Targets for Nutrition Eating for Health and Wellbeing Salt reduction (2010) Saturated fat reduction (2010) Energy balance targets (2006) Micronutrient advice (2007) Salt in 10 x foods contributing most to diet (2006) Nutrition in institutions (2005) Survey programme (2005) Content labelling (2006) Review food choice (2005) Food vision Whole school approach Promotion of food to kids
4
Objectives of nutrition research Objectives: To improve dietary well-being and reduce diet related chronic disease by helping the consumer make healthier food choices. To inform how to best influence people’s behaviour in order to help deliver dietary improvements to the nation. To produce new, and refine existing, dietary recommendations.
5
Criteria for funded research We fund pure and applied research in the nutritional and social sciences in humans Priority is given to food based or nutrient studies in dose ranges found naturally in the diet Randomised controlled trials We do not fund Animal or test tube studies Studies where the primary purpose is to understand mechanisms Studies to develop novel or niche market foods
6
Current research portfolio 7 programmes 35 projects Approx £6.7 million/year –National Diet and Nutrition Survey (NDNS) approx £2.5 million/year
7
3 programmes inform dietary recommendations: Diet and Cardiovascular Disease Nutrition Status and Function Diet and Colonic Health
8
EXAMPLE 1 Impact of the amount and composition of dietary fat and carbohydrate on metabolic syndrome and cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk Study design –Controlled, single blind, parallel study. Subjects (n=650) randomly assigned to one of 5 groups for a 24 week period (plus 4 week run in): 1) Control (high SFA/high GI) 2) High MUFA/High GI 3) High MUFA/Low GI 4) Low Fat/High GI 5) Low Fat/Low GI –Primary outcome = impact of dietary changes on insulin resistance Measurements at baseline and 24 weeks –Insulin sensitivity, fasting lipid profile, markers of haemostatic and inflammatory function, dietary assessment
9
2 programmes aim understand factors effecting food choice and to develop and test interventions to improve food choice Food Acceptability and Choice Food Choice and Inequalities
10
EXAMPLE 2 Change in snacking habits and obesity over 20 years in children aged 11 to 12 years Secondary analysis of cross sectional data to evaluate changes in snacking patterns in children over 20 years 3 dietary surveys conducted in 1980, 1990 and 2000 in the same 7 schools (ASH11) Each survey had approx 400 children Methods across 3 surveys were the same Two definitions of meal and snack were used - following slides report application of uniform definition across all data sets.
11
Meals 1980 Snacks 1980 Meals 1990 Snacks 1990 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 123456789101112131415161718192021222324 Hour in day % of events Meals 2000 Snacks 2000 Adamson, (2008)
12
EXAMPLE 3 National Diet and Nutrition Survey (NDNS) Cross-sectional survey of individuals UK coverage – adults and children Continuous fieldwork (rolling) began April 2008 Data collected: Food consumption Nutrient intake Nutritional status Lifestyle
13
NDNS aims to: monitor the nutritional well being of the population compare intakes with recommendations describe characteristics of people with low (or high) intakes model changes in diet or composition monitor progress towards targets (saturated fat and salt) form the basis of food chemical exposure assessment
14
Improve UK Diet and Health Making healthier eating easier Influencing products Influencing people Influencing the environment Providing healthier choices Remove barriers to healthier choices Activity What How Making healthier choices easier Expert Advice Reformulation Portion size Folate Labelling Skills/ Knowledge Campaigns Signposting Information Access to products Promotion of food to kids Nutrient (DH lead) profiling Activity in schools (Ed deps lead) Legislation Evidence EvaluationSurveysNutrition & Social Research
15
Future Key issues: Most existing evidence is from cohort studies which does not provide evidence of causality. Increasing costs of research limited resources
16
Future Options for the future: More large scale interventions Improvement in methods for assessing diet and nutritional status including new ‘omic’ technologies More holistic interventions and multi-disciplinary approaches to address the evidence gap around how to improve diets and lifestyles.
17
FSA Nutrition Research Review Aim To review the Agency’s nutrition research portfolio Timescale External panel meeting – Autumn 2008 Public consultation – Late 2008/early 2009 Recommendation to FSA – Spring 2009
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.