| Literature DB >> 32350655 |
Adèle R Tufford1, Philip C Calder2,3, Pieter Van't Veer4, Edith F Feskens4, Theo Ockhuizen5, Aletta D Kraneveld6, Jan Sikkema7, Jan de Vries8,9.
Abstract
Malnutrition in an obese world was the fitting title of the 13th Federation of European Nutrition Societies (FENS) conference held in October 2019. Many individuals do not eat a healthy, well-balanced diet, and this is now understood to be a major driver of increased disease risk and illness. Moreover, both our current eating patterns and the food system as a whole are environmentally unsustainable, threatening the planetary systems we depend on for survival. As we attempt to feed a growing global population, food systems will increasingly be confronted with their environmental impacts, with the added challenge of climate change-induced threats to food production. As we move into the third decade of the twenty-first century, these challenges demand that the nutrition research community reconsider its scope, concepts, methods, and societal role. At a pre-meeting workshop held at the FENS conference, over 70 researchers active in the field explored ways to advance the discipline's capacity to address cross-cutting issues of personal, public and planetary health. Using the world cafe method, four themed discussion tables explored (a) the breadth of scientific domains needed to meet the current challenges, (b) the nature and definition of the shifting concepts in nutrition sciences, (c) the next-generation methods required and (d) communication and organisational challenges and opportunities. As a follow-up to earlier work [1], here we report the highlights of the discussions, and propose the next steps to advance responsible research and innovation in the domain of nutritional science.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32350655 PMCID: PMC7220883 DOI: 10.1007/s00394-020-02241-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Nutr ISSN: 1436-6207 Impact factor: 5.614
Overview of the participating groups: a shared mission to ensure nutrition science is fit for the twenty-first century
Fig. 1The World Cafe method: examples of collaborative discussion output. The workshop principles followed the World Café method, using the following principles: set an appropriate context; create a hospitable space; explore questions that matter; encourage everyone’s contribution; connect diverse perspectives; listen together for patterns and insights; and sharing of collective discoveries [42]. Each participant followed an individualised route around the tables to ensure interaction with a different group of individuals at each table visited
Fig. 2What is Nutrition Science? An adapted cloud chart of the domains and disciplines identified as critical to the future of nutrition sciences in collaborative workshop discussion. The overarching bodies with the capacity to cross-fertilise and integrate the data, methods and training between disciplines are noted in brackets, with the relevant disciplines they currently cover, or propose to cover in the near future. FNH-RI and the EU Open Science Cloud are infrastructures that are still in planning or have not reached maturity
Fig. 3Communication and Impact. Streamlining nutrition science communication upstream to policy makers and health authorities, and downstream to citizens/consumers requires working groups and entities with targeted communication channels in a circular feedback loop. This flow chart illustrates the pathways via which redesigned organisational communication structures could lead to societal impacts