It prominently highlights the great work of my Friedman School colleagues Miriam Nelson and Christina Economos:
Miriam Nelson got the call while she was rock climbing in Canada: It was the White House assistant chef, of all people, summoning her to a closed-door meeting with the new first lady of the United States. It was 2009, Nelson was one of the nation’s top experts on nutrition and exercise, a Tufts University professor at the time, and she wasn’t the only one: a half-dozen more got the same surprise invitation....I also enjoyed Danny Vinik's interesting poll of food policy experts. It seems revealing that most of the respondents would have supported stronger language in the Dietary Guidelines encouraging Americans to consume less meat (after all, that was the view of the more independent scientific Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee), limits on healthy food marketing to kids, and state or local initiatives to tax soda. Separately, the majority also supported greater efforts to reduce hunger. But, the majority did not support mandatory GMO labeling. I was included in the sample, and, in each case, I voted with the majority.
With Democrats holding control of Congress, Nelson and the others realized, the East Wing was formulating a big policy push that would use all available levers of the federal government to improve how Americans eat. They wanted a new law to make school lunches healthier; they saw ways to deploy federal stimulus dollars on new cooking equipment in public school cafeterias and to use government financing to get grocery stores into poor communities where fresh food wasn’t readily available. They wanted to overhaul the federal nutrition label so it confronted shoppers more directly with calorie counts. Even the more symbolic side of American food policy was coming under the microscope: A reboot of the decades-old “food pyramid” that told families how to balance a meal.
“You really got the sense that this is something that she was likely to take on,” recalled Nelson, who was asked for advice on nutrition and exercise programs that worked. “It was very exciting.”
A brief digression on survey sampling: The poll is not a scientific survey of observations randomly sampled from a larger population of food policy experts in general. Instead, it is a tabulation of responses from a particular sample of researchers and writers on food policy topics. As such, it seems important to let readers know who was sampled -- which is exactly what Vinik does in a list at the bottom of the article. That seems to me a completely legitimate reporting approach. Also, it is fun to try to guess which of my colleagues gave which answers.
1 comment:
I feel as if this policy of providing healthier food in institutions and eliminating food waste is one that would cause benefits to america as a whole. The foundation of nutrition habits begins in childhood; so by feeding children unhealthy foods, that is only setting them up for failure when they have full control of their food choices. This contributes to the american obesity epidemic and development of chronic disease--which relates to 7 of the top 10 leading causes of death. Changes have been made compared to when i was in grade school (~15 years ago), requiring low fat and fat free milk compared to allowing high fat, flavored milk; however, there is still massive room for improvement. I can recall what the 4 lunch lines would typically serve throughout the week: Burger and fries (everyday), pasta, nachos, and pizza (4 out of 5 days). While these food certainly did taste good, these foods do not provide examples of healthy food choices. Where as these foods might be modified to meet certain macronutrient requirements, the same options out in the "real world" will not be required to follow the same guidelines. So america wants to end this obesity epidemic? It starts with teaching good food habits to the younger and future generations.
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