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I got into a debate about the EAT-Lancet diet with Marco Springmann, an author of the report. Folks, this is as juicy as it gets in an academic journal š¤£
Marcoās letter: thelancet.com/journals/lanplā¦
Our reply: thelancet.com/journals/lanplā¦
Poverty, conflict, and climate change have deepened the nutrition crisis among adolescent girls and women.
@UNICEF calls on governments and partners to transform food, health, and social protection systems for women and girls: uni.cf/3KJlSxF#WomensDay | #IWD2023
Apply to the Cornell Transforming Food Systems Fellowship! Weāre looking for food system leaders to join us in Cornellās Master of Public Health program.
@USDA_NIFA@CornellMPH
ALT Flyer with photo of student in a Cornell shirt in a field. The flyer reads: Join us as a Transforming Food Systems Fellow! Apply for Our New Fellowship! Cornell Transforming Food Systems Fellows will work to create food systems that are sustainable, equitable, and health-promoting for people, animals and the planet. They will learn from interdisciplinary faculty, engage in real-world learning opportunities, and receive specialized mentorship. Three fellows will receive tuition and stipend support toward a 2-year Master of Public Health (MPH) degree. Over a two-year period, Fellows will receive $44,000 in tuition scholarship and a $37,000 stipend (each year receiving $22,000 in tuition scholarship and an $18,500 stipend). Financial support for this program is provided by the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture's National Needs Fellowship Program and the Cornell University MPH Program. Learn more at publichealth.cornell.edu/TFSfellowship
For priority consideration, apply to Cornellās MPH Program via SOPHAS by February 1st and complete the supplementary Transforming Food Systems Fellowship Application by February 15th.
š¢ There's still time to apply!
Apply to the Cornell Transforming Food Systems Fellowship! Weāre looking for food system leaders to join us in Cornellās Master of Public Health program.
Reach out with any questions!
publichealth.cornell.edu/tfsā¦@USDA_NIFA@CornellMPH
A team of Cornell MPH students and faculty partnered with Newfield Central School District and @ccecornell to explore the overall school food environment with different stakeholder groups.
Learn more here: bit.ly/3CWVxY6
ALT āChildren are often the focus of behavior change research, but not involved in designing or evaluating interventions,ā DiGiorgio points out. āThere is evidence to show that childrenās development depends on the opportunity to be agents in their own dietary patterns,ā she says.
DiGiorgio believes childrenās perspectives should be included both to improve research and āto empower kids to be involved in their roles in the food system.ā Her interviews with 3rd-5th graders found that their school food priorities were often less about the food itself, and more about seeing friends from other classes, decompressing from the busy school day and just āhaving funā at lunch.
These priorities donāt always align with those of parents or administrators, of course, which DiGiorgio says illustrates āwhy we need to factor in kidsā perspectivesā in school food policy decisions.
-Francesca DiGiorgio, Cornell MPH '22
ALT āSome parents shared how school lunch supports their families and routines,ā says Lockhart. She interviewed parents who both did and didnāt have kids participating in the school lunch program. Lockhart found that parents cared most about cost, time and convenience, the quality of food and nutrition, the variety of food choices offered, and their childrenās preferences and dietary restrictions.
āThis research is not at all a way to tell a school how to run their food program better,ā she points out. One of her recommendations was for schools to āpromote the winsā to the larger community, showcasing āall the positive things they are doing.ā She also found that reframing the cafeteria as a space for learning, rather than just a place to āget food and move on with the day,ā could appeal to parents.
-Sonja Lockhart, Cornell MPH '22
A new collaborative grant from @CornellGlobalās Polson Institute and led by @iamramyaambi and @shubhswain aims to understand the role of gender in the food system and the effects on research, intervention, and policies for transformation.
bit.ly/cornell-fsgc-gender-fā¦
Fellows will earn a two-year Master of Public Health degree, learn from interdisciplinary faculty, engage in real-world learning opportunities, and receive specialized mentorship.
Over two years, Fellows will receive $44,000 in tuition scholarships and a $37,000 stipend.
š¢ Apply to the Cornell Transforming Food Systems Fellowship! Weāre looking for food system leaders to join us in Cornellās Master of Public Health program.
publichealth.cornell.edu/tfsā¦@USDA_NIFA@CornellMPH
This may not be the right time in the history of often exploitative and insensitive development research to write a thread like this. I have so many feelings about this thread but no words for those feelings. It isnāt funny and it didnāt regale me. Thatās all.
So many aspiring young social scientists applying for their first research assistant positions right now, I thought I'd regale you with my first RA job (and my third best field work story). š
Plant-based meat sales are down.
Here's the Venn diagram of one of the reasons: it's highly processed.
Is that a legit reason to dis them? @MikeGrunwald and I take a long hard look at processed foods in the new @ClimavoresPod episode.
(tl;dr: Not legit)
podcasts.apple.com/us/podcasā¦
"Paula Eiselt & Tonya Lewis Lee, did not want to bombard the audience with statistics. While Aftershock follows the stories of 2 women, Shamony Gibson & Amber Rose Isaac, who died during or after childbirth, it also celebrates their lives & legacies" smithsonianmag.com/smart-newā¦
1/ A fresh, running thread on COVIDās well-documented cardiovascular harms for anyone who needs links when discussing the rise in heart failure and strokes among younger and middle-aged people since 2020: