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Research for food and health in Europe: themes, needs and proposals

BACKGROUND: Diet, in addition to tobacco, alcohol and physical exercise, is a major factor contributing to chronic diseases in Europe. There is a pressing need for multidisciplinary research to promote healthier food choices and better diets. Food and Health Research in Europe (FAHRE) is a collabora...

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Autores principales: McCarthy, Mark, Aitsi-Selmi, Amina, Bánáti, Diána, Frewer, Lynn, Hirani, Vasant, Lobstein, Tim, McKenna, Brian, Mulla, Zenab, Rabozzi, Giulia, Sfetcu, Raluca, Newton, Rachel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3203080/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21958161
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1478-4505-9-37
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author McCarthy, Mark
Aitsi-Selmi, Amina
Bánáti, Diána
Frewer, Lynn
Hirani, Vasant
Lobstein, Tim
McKenna, Brian
Mulla, Zenab
Rabozzi, Giulia
Sfetcu, Raluca
Newton, Rachel
author_facet McCarthy, Mark
Aitsi-Selmi, Amina
Bánáti, Diána
Frewer, Lynn
Hirani, Vasant
Lobstein, Tim
McKenna, Brian
Mulla, Zenab
Rabozzi, Giulia
Sfetcu, Raluca
Newton, Rachel
author_sort McCarthy, Mark
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Diet, in addition to tobacco, alcohol and physical exercise, is a major factor contributing to chronic diseases in Europe. There is a pressing need for multidisciplinary research to promote healthier food choices and better diets. Food and Health Research in Europe (FAHRE) is a collaborative project commissioned by the European Union. Among its tasks is the description of national research systems for food and health and, in work reported here, the identification of strengths and gaps in the European research base. METHODS: A typology of nine research themes was developed, spanning food, society, health and research structures. Experts were selected through the FAHRE partners, with balance for individual characteristics, and reported using a standardised template. RESULTS: Countries usually commission research on food, and on health, separately: few countries have combined research strategies or programmes. Food and health are also strongly independent fields within the European Commission's research programmes. Research programmes have supported food and bio-technology, food safety, epidemiological research, and nutritional surveillance; but there has been less research into personal behaviour and very little on environmental influences on food choices - in the retail and marketing industries, policy, and regulation. The research is mainly sited within universities and research institutes: there is relatively little published research contribution from industry. DISCUSSION: National food policies, based on epidemiological evidence and endorsed by the World Health Organisation, recommend major changes in food intake to meet the challenge of chronic diseases. Biomedical and biotechnology research, in areas such as 'nutrio-genomics', 'individualised' diets, 'functional' foods and 'nutri-pharmaceuticals' appear likely to yield less health benefit, and less return on public investment, than research on population-level interventions to influence dietary patterns: for example policies to reduce population consumption of trans fats, saturated fats, salt and energy density. Research should now address how macro-diets, rather than micro-nutritional content, can be improved for beneficial impacts on health, and should evaluate the impact of market changes and policy interventions, including regulation, to improve public health. CONCLUSIONS: European and national research on food and health should have social as well as commercial benefits. Strategies and policies should be developed between ministries of health and national research funding agencies. Collaboration between member states in the European Union can yield better innovation and greater competitive advantage.
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spelling pubmed-32030802011-10-28 Research for food and health in Europe: themes, needs and proposals McCarthy, Mark Aitsi-Selmi, Amina Bánáti, Diána Frewer, Lynn Hirani, Vasant Lobstein, Tim McKenna, Brian Mulla, Zenab Rabozzi, Giulia Sfetcu, Raluca Newton, Rachel Health Res Policy Syst Research BACKGROUND: Diet, in addition to tobacco, alcohol and physical exercise, is a major factor contributing to chronic diseases in Europe. There is a pressing need for multidisciplinary research to promote healthier food choices and better diets. Food and Health Research in Europe (FAHRE) is a collaborative project commissioned by the European Union. Among its tasks is the description of national research systems for food and health and, in work reported here, the identification of strengths and gaps in the European research base. METHODS: A typology of nine research themes was developed, spanning food, society, health and research structures. Experts were selected through the FAHRE partners, with balance for individual characteristics, and reported using a standardised template. RESULTS: Countries usually commission research on food, and on health, separately: few countries have combined research strategies or programmes. Food and health are also strongly independent fields within the European Commission's research programmes. Research programmes have supported food and bio-technology, food safety, epidemiological research, and nutritional surveillance; but there has been less research into personal behaviour and very little on environmental influences on food choices - in the retail and marketing industries, policy, and regulation. The research is mainly sited within universities and research institutes: there is relatively little published research contribution from industry. DISCUSSION: National food policies, based on epidemiological evidence and endorsed by the World Health Organisation, recommend major changes in food intake to meet the challenge of chronic diseases. Biomedical and biotechnology research, in areas such as 'nutrio-genomics', 'individualised' diets, 'functional' foods and 'nutri-pharmaceuticals' appear likely to yield less health benefit, and less return on public investment, than research on population-level interventions to influence dietary patterns: for example policies to reduce population consumption of trans fats, saturated fats, salt and energy density. Research should now address how macro-diets, rather than micro-nutritional content, can be improved for beneficial impacts on health, and should evaluate the impact of market changes and policy interventions, including regulation, to improve public health. CONCLUSIONS: European and national research on food and health should have social as well as commercial benefits. Strategies and policies should be developed between ministries of health and national research funding agencies. Collaboration between member states in the European Union can yield better innovation and greater competitive advantage. BioMed Central 2011-09-29 /pmc/articles/PMC3203080/ /pubmed/21958161 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1478-4505-9-37 Text en Copyright ©2011 McCarthy et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
McCarthy, Mark
Aitsi-Selmi, Amina
Bánáti, Diána
Frewer, Lynn
Hirani, Vasant
Lobstein, Tim
McKenna, Brian
Mulla, Zenab
Rabozzi, Giulia
Sfetcu, Raluca
Newton, Rachel
Research for food and health in Europe: themes, needs and proposals
title Research for food and health in Europe: themes, needs and proposals
title_full Research for food and health in Europe: themes, needs and proposals
title_fullStr Research for food and health in Europe: themes, needs and proposals
title_full_unstemmed Research for food and health in Europe: themes, needs and proposals
title_short Research for food and health in Europe: themes, needs and proposals
title_sort research for food and health in europe: themes, needs and proposals
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3203080/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21958161
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1478-4505-9-37
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