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This collaboration between CDC Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity and Obesity and United States Department of Agriculture aims to address hunger, food insecurity, and obesity by expanding access to healthy food and promoting nutrition education. Key projects include the National Collaboration on Childhood Obesity Research and the Healthy Food Financing Initiative.
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CDCDivision of Nutrition, Physical Activity and Obesityand United States Department of Agriculture:Cross-Agency CollaborationASTPHND, Fruit & Vegetable State Coordinators6-16-10 Christa Essig, MPH, CDC/DNPAO – FNCS/USDA Detail
CDC/USDA Collaboration • FNS, WIC and PedNSS/PNNS – Larry Grummer-Strawn • Healthy People 2020 – Latetia Moore • Food Environment and Diet Quality Research with ERS - Latetia Moore • AMS, Farmers Market Consortium & Eval Project - Joel Kimmons, CDC • National Fruit & Vegetable Alliance – Duke Storen, OSIPO, Larry Grummer-Strawn, CDC • National Collaborative on Childhood Obesity Research- Laura Kettel-Kahn, CDC, Molly Kretsch, Office of Chief Scientist, USDA • School and Child Nutrition, School Wellness Policies- Howell Wechsler, DASH, CDC • DNPAO working on state childcare – Barb Polhamous, Meredith Reynolds • CDC/FDA/FTA/USDA working on criteria for foods marketed to children
National Collaboration on Childhood Obesity Research (NCCOR) Participation • CDC – Laura Kettel-Kahn • USDA – Molly Kretsch • NIH • Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Key Projects and Research Initiatives • Registry of Measures • Catalog of Childhood Obesity-Related Policy and Health Monitoring Systems • Examining Effects of Community Programs to Reduce Childhood Obesity
Healthy Food Financing Initiative • $400 million partnership of Treasury, USDA, and HHS • Includes bringing healthy foods into underserved areas via grocery stores, convenience stores, farmers markets • Eliminate food deserts across the country in seven years • USDA Food Atlas – Inclusion of CDC surveillance
FNCS/USDA – CDC Detail Goals Facilitate connections for ongoing communication at various levels Develop understanding of each other for identifying collaboration entry points including goals, research, future directions, and each other’s perspectives Develop an action plan with steps for CDC and FNCS to integrate programs, strengthen and institutionalize organizational linkages
Food, Nutrition and Consumer Services Center for Nutrition Policy and Promotion (CNPP) - Nutrition Evidence Library - Dietary Guidelines for Americans - Food Guide Pyramid - Nutrient Content of the US Food Supply - USDA Food Plans: Cost of Food
FNS • SNAP – State Social Services • SNAP-Ed – State Social Services (EARS) • Farmers Market Nutrition Program • WIC – Dep. of Health • Child Nutrition Programs – Dep. Of Education Office of Research and Analysis Office of Strategic Initiatives, Partnerships and Outreach
Missions FNS Reduce hunger and food insecurity by ensuring better access to food, a healthful diet, and nutrition education for children and needy families DNPAO Lead strategic public health efforts to prevent and control obesity, chronic disease and other health conditions through physical activity and good nutrition FNS Priorities (my perception): Address hunger and obesity in school lunch programs End childhood hunger Increase program participation and outreach Streamline nutrition assistance program applications Expand Summer Food Service Program
Collaboration Challenges • Individual benefit vs. population approach • Food Security and Ending Hunger vs. Obesity • FNCS ‘authority’ and legislative language (Waiting for Child Nutrition Reauthorization) • SNAP-Ed interpretation • SNAP-Ed reach to non-SNAP people • SNAP use of Partnerships • Making nutrition education and environmental and policy changes complementary
State Program F&V Highlights http://www.cdc.gov/obesity/stateprograms/statestories.html
State Collaboration Highlights:Non-profit, State Health, and USDA Programs Expanding Access to Fresh Fruits and Vegetables Through WIC-Authorized Corner Stores http://www.health.state.mn.us/divs/fh/wic/vendor/fpchng/index.html Increased Fruit and Vegetable Access Through EBT at Farmers Markets http://www.farmersmarket.msu.edu
Cross-Agency Examples: • Farm-to-School • Farmers Markets EBT • Urban Agriculture • Food Policy Councils • Comprehensive City Plans • Food Hubs • Community Food Assessments, Food Shed/ Local Food Assessments, Health Impact Assessment, F2S Analysis
Southeast F2S Summit and Collaboration • Partners: USDA (RD, NRCS, AMS, FSA, RMA) SE Regional Office, UGA (Extension Service), Dep. Of Education, GA Alliance with Georgia Organics, EPA • Fed Team to support State Team with communication needs, TA and resources • State Legislation • AMS – Farmer Co-ops • FSA – Processing and storage equipment
Examples • WI, Research, Education, Action and Policy Food Group, DHS and Dep. Of Ag: Farm-to-School and Got Dirt • Nutrition Programs = One Bureau • CPPW
Opportunities for Collaboration • Support state and local partnerships and coalitions • Complementary programs for broad system impact • Support common policy change - local, state, and national levels • Share research, data, grant opportunities (CPPW), resources, joint trainings and technical assistance, and identify and communicate promising practices • Coordinate program messages • Plan cross-program data inventories and reporting • i.e. Programs areas focusing on intersection of obesity and health disparities and food insecurity, food access, healthy food system support
State Contacts: Food, Nutrition and Consumer Services (FNCS) Nutrition Assistance Programs: SNAP and SNAP Ed – State Social Services WIC – Dep. of Health School Meals – Dep. of Education
State Contacts: Agriculture Cooperative Extension State Land Grant Universities National Institutes for Food and Agriculture (NIFA) • Expanded Food and Nutrition Program • 4-H Youth Development • Community Food Projects
Contacts: Others • Agriculture Research Service (ARS) • Agriculture Marketing Service (AMS) • National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) • Economic Research Service (ERS) • Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) • Rural Development (RD) • Know Your Farmer, Know Your Food (KYF)
Know Your Farmer, Know Your Food MISSION: Know Your Farmer, Know Your Food (KFY2) strengthens the critical connection between farmers and consumers and supports local and regional food systems. Through this initiative, USDA integrates and emphasizes programs and policies that: • Stimulate food- and agriculturally-based community economic development; • Foster new opportunities for farmers and ranchers; • Promote locally and regionally produced and processed food; • Cultivate healthy eating habits and educated, empowered consumers; • Expand access to affordable fresh and local food; and • Demonstrate the connection between food, agriculture, community and the environment. KYF2 also leads a national conversation about food and agriculture to increase the linkages between consumers and farmers.
Steward cross-agency initiatives to better leverage USDA resources I. Farm-to-school and school-to-farm II. Local meat III. Food distribution hubs IV. Food deserts V. USDA in-house operations VI. Opportunities in agriculture VII. Business structures
USDA 2010-2015 Strategic Plan • STRATEGIC GOAL 1: ASSIST RURAL COMMUNITIES TO CREATE PROSPERITY SO THEY ARE SELF-SUSTAINING, REPOPULATING, AND ECONOMICALLY THRIVING • STRATEGIC GOAL 2: ENSURE OUR NATIONAL FORESTS AND PRIVATE WORKING LANDS ARE CONSERVED, RESTORED, AND MADE MORE RESILIENT TO CLIMATE CHANGE, WHILE ENHANCING OUR WATER RESOURCES • STRATEGIC GOAL 3: HELP AMERICA PROMOTE AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION AND BIOTECHNOLOGY EXPORTS AS AMERICA WORKS TO INCREASE FOOD SECURITY • STRATEGIC GOAL 4: ENSURE THAT ALL OF AMERICA’S CHILDREN HAVE ACCESS TO SAFE, NUTRITIOUS, AND BALANCED MEALS Objective 4.1 – Increase Access to Nutritious Food Objective 4.2 – Promote Healthy Diet and Physical Activity Behaviors Objective 4.3 – Protect Public Health by Ensuring Food is Safe Objective 4.4 – Protect Agricultural Health by Minimizing Major Diseases and Pests to Ensure Access to Safe, Plentiful, and Nutritious Food http://www.ocfo.usda.gov/usdasp/sp2010/sp2010.pdf
USDA Grant Opportunities FNS: Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Program Healthy Incentives Pilots Farmers Market Nutrition Programs School Facilities
Grant Opportunities • NIFA: Community Food Projects Healthy Urban Food Enterprise Agriculture and Food Research Initiatives 4-H Youth Development • RD: Community Facilities Program Faith Based and Community Initiatives • ERS: Specialty Crops Block Grants Research Innovation and Development Grants in Economics (RIDGE) Food Assistance and Nutrition Research Program (FANRP)
USDA Resources • 2007 Cooperative Extension includes:“Helping U.S. residents to become physically, mentally, and emotionally healthy” http://www.aplu.org/NetCommunity/Document.Doc?id=369) • Land Grant University http://www.nifa.usda.gov/qlinks/partners/state_partners.html • Extension Resources http://www.extension.org/ • Families, Food and Fitness http://www.extension.org/families%20food%20fitness • Ag in the Classroom http://www.agclassroom.org/index.htm • Center for Nutrition Policy and Promotion (CNPP), MyPyramid http://www.mypyramid.gov/
ERS Food Desert Research http://www.ers.usda.gov/Publications/AP/AP036/ • Research Reports http://www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/FoodSecurity/ • Local Food Systems: Concepts, Impacts, and Issues http://www.ers.usda.gov/Publications/ERR97/ERR97.pdf • Healthier US Schools http://www.fns.usda.gov/tn/healthierus/all_chart.pdf • 4-H Youth Development for community leadership in support of healthier life choices http://4-h.org/programs_mission_mandates/healthyliving.html