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  • Belém 2025: From Global Crises to Amazonian Solutions

    By Jadh Azulay Last November, I had the privilege of moderating the Belém Satellite Event on Food Security & Sustainability, ahead of the 11th International Summit on Food, Nutrition & Health. In the heart of the Amazon, where biodiversity, culture, and climate pressures converged with COP30, the discussions revealed how global nutrition challenges intersect with local realities, and how this region can point us toward new solutions. Professor Sumantra Ray opened with a clear warning: the world must move beyond simply delivering calories. Countries now face overlapping burdens of malnutrition, from undernutrition and micronutrient gaps to rising obesity and diet-related diseases. Improving diet quality, securing sustainable financing, and strengthening food systems against climate and economic shocks emerged as urgent global priorities. These themes took on deeper meaning during the recent field visit to Combu Island near Belem.  Conversations with residents highlighted persistent challenges: high costs of accessing fresh food, weak infrastructure, irregular electricity, unsafe drinking water, and limited basic services. Yet they also underscored the resilience of communities whose livelihoods and identities remain deeply tied to the forest. Any solution must respect this connection and address the structural barriers of geography, logistics, and cultural adequacy. Innovation showcased at the event demonstrated paths forward. The TIGR2ESS program is developing climate-resilient crops and more sustainable rural systems. At the same time, the award-winning Mobile Teaching Kitchens empower marginalised women through culinary nutrition education and micro-enterprise, tackling food insecurity and breaking cycles of poverty from the ground up. In this context, Elenilma Barros and Rosilene Reis, both nutritionists from the Regional Council of Nutrition, brought the Amazon discussions to remind us that food security here is inseparable from environmental protection, cultural identity, and social justice. Remote geography, agroindustrial expansion, shifting diets, and high food prices continue to undermine access to healthy, culturally relevant foods, with over half of households in the Amazon facing food insecurity. Strengthening family farming, agroecology, community-based production, and logistics adapted to rivers and forest landscapes are essential steps, alongside policies that value traditional knowledge and ensure Indigenous and local communities lead the process. Education and foundational resources remain essential. María Verónica Flores-Bello stressed the integration of Sustainability Education into higher education and strengthening institutional nutrition education. Ester Feche highlighted the link between water security, public health, and the carbon footprint of local food production. Discussions also explored whether carbon markets could empower Indigenous communities sustainably, funding health education and regional food enterprises. The event closed with updates from the COP30 negotiations, reaffirming that meaningful progress depends on interdisciplinary collaboration and commitments that bridge global frameworks with the lived realities of the Amazon. From Belém to the world, the message was clear: solutions to international food and climate crises will require listening to, and learning from, the people who keep the forest standing. Check out all photos here .

  • MTK through the eyes of Agents of Change

    Authors:  Mhairi Halbert, Denika Dabee, Kate Ruddy & Yaseen Ahammed.    Reviewed and edited by:  Ramya Rajaram, Shumone Ray.        The Agents of Change placement is designed to encourage medical students to recognise the role they can play in improving community health by engaging with third-sector organisations. By placing us within real community settings and asking us to learn with,  rather than simply  about,  local groups, the programme aims to strengthen our understanding of public health, social prescribing, health inequalities, and the broader social determinants that shape wellbeing.  During our seven-week Agents of Change placement with NNEdPro, we were not only allowed to observe community health initiatives but also to participate in them. As medical students, we are often taught about nutrition, behaviour change and health inequalities in abstract classroom terms; the Mobile Teaching Kitchen (MTK) allowed us to experience these concepts in action. Through in-person sessions, conversations with MTK community champions, and hands-on involvement in workshops, we began to understand how nutrition education becomes meaningful only when rooted in people’s lived realities.  Our time with the Mobile Teaching Kitchen Initiative (MTK), part of global NNEdPro Initiatives, offered a practical look at how community-led nutrition education can foster empowerment, connection and sustainable health practices. MTK’s mission of “democratising nutrition” bringing food education back to lived experience rather than distant expertise informed every session we attended. What follows is a collective reflection on what we saw, learned, and questioned: four perspectives shaped by the same community model, expressed through our individual experiences.    The Clinical Relevance of the MTK   Volunteering with the NNEdPro Global Institute’s Mobile Teaching Kitchen (MTK) has shown us how transformative practical nutrition education can be. The MTK model teaches people to prepare balanced, affordable meals while also explaining the nutritional value of everyday ingredients. Integrating this kind of hands-on support into clinical care, particularly through social prescribing, could offer patients help that goes far beyond standard dietary advice.  Many common conditions seen in primary care, including obesity, hypertension, and micronutrient deficiencies, are strongly shaped by diet. Yet clinicians often lack the time or resources to provide patients with the practical skills needed to change how they eat. Referring patients to MTK-style workshops through social prescribing could bridge this gap, giving them confidence, cooking skills, and nutrition literacy in a supportive environment. In the long term, this preventative approach has the potential to reduce both the burden and the cost of diet-related conditions on the National Health Service.  What makes the MTK especially valuable is its community-centred setting. Cooking and learning together help reduce isolation, build motivation, and support mental well-being. This matters greatly, given the documented links between obesity and psychological distress. The sense of community created in MTK sessions can serve as a meaningful complement to traditional medical treatment.   There is also clear potential for addressing health inequalities. MTKs can be taken directly into underprivileged neighbourhoods, making nutrition education more accessible and culturally relevant. In doing so, they help transfer the principles of the mobile kitchen into people’s own homes, supporting sustainable dietary change in familiar settings. Integrating MTK-inspired programmes into patient care pathways could therefore provide a cost-effective, empowering, and holistic way to improve health from the root, one shared meal, and one community at a time.   Engagement at the Mobile Teaching Kitchens   For many participants, cooking publicly can feel intimidating. The fear of “doing it wrong” or not knowing enough can hold people back from even trying. But the MTK environment melts that fear away. By inviting people to chop, stir, taste and ask questions, it shows that cooking is not a performance, it is a learning journey. The kitchen becomes a safe space where mistakes are simply part of the process, and curiosity is welcomed.  What makes the MTK especially powerful is how it turns abstract nutritional ideas into something tangible. Concepts like “balance,” “fibre,” or “healthy swaps” can feel distant when spoken about in clinical language. But seeing a balanced plate in front of you: equal portions of vegetables, proteins and carbohydrates cooked affordably and simply gives nutrition a form you can hold. Theory becomes edible; understanding becomes instinctive.  This is applied nutrition at its most meaningful. Participants don’t just learn what to eat, they understand why it matters and how to make it work within the reality of their own lives. Low-cost ingredients, familiar flavours and culturally sensitive recipes make healthy eating feel achievable rather than aspirational. Affordable dishes, cooked together and enjoyed together, quietly dismantle the idea that health requires privilege.  The magic of MTK engagement lies in this blend of practice and empowerment. As people cook side by side, they share stories, tips, memories and small victories. The kitchen becomes a community, and nutrition becomes a conversation rather than a lecture. You can see the change happen in real time: the quiet participant asking their first question, the hesitant cook taking the lead, the moment someone realises they can recreate the meal at home for their family.  Through this simple but profound model, MTKs remind us that meaningful nutritional change does not start with rules; it begins with confidence. It starts with someone showing you that you can  cook, that healthy food can be simple, cheap and delicious, and that balance is not a restriction but a guide. Engagement at MTKs is engagement with health itself: approachable, shared, and achievable.  Community Champions: The Heart of the MTK   The community champions are the stars of the show, the pinnacle of what modern nutritional education often lacks: reality. They represent the heart of the initiative, real people supporting their own communities through shared learning and connection. They bridge the gap between ‘food as medicine’ and ‘food as dinner’, embodying the MTK mission of translating the complex nutritional landscape into something practical, accessible, and fun.  Their peer-to-peer teaching offers a gentle, relatable introduction to healthier choices, empowering friends and family to see their own well-being reflected in their meals. They help widen the community’s comfort zone around staple dishes by showing that nutritious adaptations can fit naturally into daily life. Rather than presenting nutrition as a set of rules, they translate it into everyday conversations about what they enjoy cooking, what their families might try, and how they’ve experimented themselves. By demonstrating nourishing meals and sharing their own learning journey, nutrition “comes home,” allowing MTK’s mission of community empowerment to truly flourish.  In guiding their community through the minefield of modern nutrition and grounding it in real, achievable meals, the champions themselves build confidence. Their progression highlights how the MTK model creates space for people to grow into roles they may never have imagined for themselves. Confident champions shape the community: they create the warm, humorous and supportive environment that engages our sense of togetherness, a dose of health in itself, and one that will surely ripple through generations. The champions embodied the MTK principle that meaningful change often starts with trust, connection, and seeing someone “like you” giving it a go.   Working alongside the MTK community champions highlighted how meaningful change can begin in small, familiar spaces, not only through clinical authority, but through trust, humour and shared experience. Although not every aspect of the initiative aligned perfectly with our expectations, watching the champions support one another, grow in confidence and take ownership of health conversations demonstrated the real strength of community-led approaches.  The placement showed us that being an “agent of change” is not always about delivering expertise, but about recognising and nurturing the power that already exists within communities. Even our brief involvement gave us a deeper appreciation of the long-term, relationship-based work that organisations like NNEdPro continue to build, one interaction and one shared meal at a time.

  • Anna Edesia - November Newsletter

    Author: Sarah Anderson Edited by: Matheus Abrantes & Sumantra Ray As we approach the end of 2025, we are pleased to share a consolidated update capturing key developments over the last few months across the NNEdPro Global Institute and our nine partner initiatives. This period reflected sustained progress in our strategic programmes, deepening global engagement, and continued preparation for the 11th International Summit on Food, Nutrition and Health taking place next month in Dundee and St Andrews, Scotland.   Throughout the second half of the year, we have focused on advancing the commitments made at our 10th International Summit by further strengthening cross-sector collaboration, expanding opportunities for applied learning, and driving forward our mission to accelerate evidence-informed nutrition action worldwide.   We extend our thanks to our members, collaborators, and supporters whose contributions underpin every step of this work. Your continued involvement enables us to maintain momentum as we close our 17th year and look ahead to the opportunities of 2026.   Read on for highlights from July to November, along with current activities and ways to engage as we begin the final chapter of this year. Spotlight on the 11th International Summit and Satellite Events The countdown is on! The 11th International Summit on Food, Nutrition and Health  returns this December, bringing together thought leaders, innovators, and practitioners to advance nutrition knowledge and equity on a global scale.   We have already completed five successful Satellite Events, with two more to come.   We are pleased to confirm that the Main Summit will take place across a series of outstanding venues in Dundee and St Andrews, each selected to reflect the Summit’s themes and the diversity of our programme:   10 December: James Hutton Institute 11 and 12 December: Dundee Science Centre 13 December: St Leonards School   We are particularly delighted to add Dundee Science Centre to the programme. As a hub for science engagement and innovation, it offers an ideal setting for discussions on human health, planetary health, and the future of nutrition research. The venue’s interactive environment will provide an inspiring backdrop for keynotes, panels, and networking.   Registrations remain open for the Main Summit (with limited in-person spaces available), the remaining Satellite Events, the Gala Dinner, and the hands-on Cooking Masterclass.   Do not miss the opportunity to be part of this global journey! Professor Walter Willett to Deliver Keynote at the 11th International Summit on Food, Nutrition & Health We are honoured to announce that Professor Walter Willett, EAT-Lancet Commission Co-Chair and Professor of Epidemiology and Nutrition at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health , will be delivering a (hybrid) keynote at the 11th International Summit this December.   Reflecting on decades of work in nutritional epidemiology, Professor Willett’s talk will explore the extent to which evidence has informed meaningful changes in nutrition education and public behaviour. His session will conclude with an interactive panel debate, co-hosted with the Society for Nutrition Education and Behavior (SNEB) Foundation. Royal Society of Biology Approves Summit for 87 CPD Credits! We are pleased to share that this year's Summit has been formally approved by the Royal Society of Biology  for Continuing Professional Development.   Participants attending the full four-day programme may claim 87 CPD points, including those registered with the Royal Society of Biology’s CPD scheme.   This recognises the Summit as an event of significant professional value, supporting the development needs of attendees across disciplines. Successfully Completed Satellite Events Bern Satellite Event on Nutrition in Population Health 10th July 2025   A focused session with Bern University of Applied Science examining how nutrition research can inform population-level health strategies, with emphasis on equity and systems thinking. Biel/Bienne Culinary Masterclass 10th July 2025   A practical culinary masterclass showcasing sensory education and plant-forward menu innovation in the Swiss context. Kuala Lumpur Satellite Event: Nutrition, Disease Prevention & Systems Thinking 28th July 2025  This session featured an overview of NNEdPro’s two decades of work, insights from the MTK Initiative, and presentations spanning literacy-focused community projects, UNICEF’s draft nutrition competency framework for medical education, and new epidemiological and clinical perspectives on NCD prevention in Malaysia.   The programme also highlighted systems-thinking approaches linking nutrition and T2DM, with discussions paving the way for renewed collaboration and network activity across South-East Asia. Ulster Satellite Event on Precision Nutrition 5th November 2025  Hosted in Northern Ireland as a replacement for the annual NICHE symposium, this event examined emerging science and applied practice in precision nutrition. Nairobi Satellite Event on Strengthening Food Systems, Nutrition & Health: Through Availability and Access 11th November 2025 A high-level forum bringing together policymakers, researchers, and practitioners to discuss nutrition-sensitive strategies that strengthen food systems, improve availability and access, and support resilient, health-promoting environments. Upcoming Summit Events Belem Satellite Event on Food Security & Sustainability   24 November 2025 | 18:00–22:00 GMT-3 In-person & Virtual | Free to attend   Hosted in Brazil, this event addresses nutrition's role in shaping food systems and promoting sustainability, especially in the context of climate and equity. Main Summit: Dundee & St Andrews, Scotland 10–13 December 2025 In-person & Virtual | Ticketed   Join us in Scotland for the full Summit experience:   10 December: Pre-Summit Symposium & Opening Reception at the James Hutton Institute (Dundee)   11–12 December: Main Summit at the Dundee Science Centre Gala Tartan Dinner  on the evening of the 11th at Dundee and Angus College. Culinary Ecology Cooking Experience  on the evening of 12th at the Dundee International Women's Centre.   13 December: Global Youth Essay Competition & Festival of Ideas  at St Leonards School (St Andrews) - Deadline for essays has been extended to 30th November! This is a fantastic way to get your children involved in the conversation.   Note:  IANE members receive a 30% discount on Main Summit registration. Join IANE today  to claim your discount! Q3 TO EARLY Q4 HIGHLIGHTS Follow-up from the 10th International Summit (December 2024) Building on the momentum of the 10th International Summit  and carrying this work forward into 2025, the Forum for Democratising Food & Nutrition  has been established in partnership with Shiv Nadar University,  as a global hub for knowledge, advocacy, and capacity-building. As we prepare to launch the Forum’s digital hub and first-year initiatives, we are making a final call for contributions to our strategic crowdfunding campaign. Your support is vital to sustaining this bridge between the 2024 and 2025 Summits and ensuring that Summit commitments translate into long-term, measurable impact. The peer-reviewed proceedings  from the last year's 10th International Summit, held in India in December 2024, have been published in BMJ Nutrition, Prevention & Health , including all scientific discussions and 50 poster abstracts. View the Proceedings NNEdPro’s 2024 Summit commitments have been registered in the UN Global Nutrition Report’s Commitment Tracker . View the Report Engagement with the Italian Embassy in London   We were very pleased to have been invited to attend an event hosted by the Italian Embassy  in London on 13 November as part of the Week of Italian Cuisine in the World. The programme explored themes central to NNEdPro’s mission, including the importance of accurate nutrition and health information and the need to counter misinformation through evidence-based science.   This engagement also strengthens our strategic alignment with the Embassy ahead of the 11th International Summit on Food, Nutrition & Health in December. We extend our thanks to the Embassy and Italian institutions for the invitation and for their continued efforts to promote the Mediterranean Diet and advance healthy, accessible nutrition for all. IANE Webinar Series  The International Academy of Nutrition Educators (IANE)  continued its engaging webinar series this quarter, bringing together members and global partners to share diverse perspectives on nutrition in practice.   In September, Ana Magnasco delivered a session on Sludges in the Out-of-Home Food Environment, examining ethical, behavioural, and policy dimensions alongside insights from the ChefChain case study. In October, Professor Meis Moukayed presented a focused webinar on Vitamin D and Women’s Reproductive Health, highlighting current evidence and implications for clinical and public health settings.   IANE webinars remain a cornerstone of our knowledge exchange efforts, bridging theory and practice across global regions. New Clinical Toolkit: Supporting Evidence-Based Nutrition Practice   Developed in collaboration with HEIGHTS, this new Clinical Toolkit provides healthcare professionals with a practical resource addressing key nutrients of concern within the UK population.   Drawing on evidence from the National Diet and Nutrition Survey and NNEdPro’s Nutrition and Supplementation Survey, the toolkit focuses on nutrients such as iron, vitamin D, folate, vitamin B12 and iodine, alongside additional micronutrients identified through Healthcare Professionals (HCPs) insight.   The resource is designed to strengthen everyday nutritional practice and support informed, evidence-based decision making in clinical settings. The toolkit is also accredited by the Royal Society of Biology for CPD (worth 3 credits).   Disclaimer: Biomarker cut-points referenced in this toolkit are based on UK guidance and may differ from international thresholds. Congratulations to Dr Rajna Golubić and Prof Pauline Douglas We are pleased to celebrate two of NNEdPro's directors on fantastic achievements. Dr Rajna Golubić on achieving specialist registration in Diabetes, Endocrinology and Internal Medicine with the General Medical Council, and on her appointment as Global Clinical Director for Endocrinology and Diabetes within Roche’s Cardiovascular, Renal and Metabolic division.   This international appointment reflects her outstanding expertise and offers a significant platform to advance late-phase clinical development and improve outcomes for people living with metabolic disorders. Edit the content in this column layout so people engage with your email. We are delighted to recognise Professor Pauline Douglas on receiving the Patricia Blackburn Award for Advancing Healthcare in Northern Ireland, with a primary citation from Ulster University and an additional acknowledgement of her longstanding contributions to NNEdPro.   This award reflects her sustained leadership in nutrition education, practice and impact across the region and beyond. Little Literacy Library Visit August 2025   A field visit to two Little Literacy Libraries in Kolkata marked this year’s Independence Day activities, supported through recent fundraising efforts led by NNEdPro colleagues and partners. The combined contributions will sustain the libraries for six months, enabling the provision of new textbooks and workbooks, essential room maintenance, librarian support, nutritious meals linked to attendance, and hygiene supplies for all children.   The team met with the children and heard firsthand about their aspirations, from future health professionals and teachers to artists and scientists, and supported peer learning sessions using pictorial literacy resources. Additional books and materials were distributed across both sites, with further resource purchases underway. RECENT BLOG POSTS 2nd October The Kitchen as an Embassy: A Proposed Model for Gastrodiplomacy 11th September   The Hidden Price of Food: Revealing the True Costs of Agrifood Systems   15th August   Plate to Planet: Why Cutting Food Waste is a Recipe for Change 12th August Nourishing Immunity: How Maternal and Infant Diets Can Help Prevent Food Allergies 5th August   The Future of Nutrition Research Methods and Effective Publishing Strategies SHARE YOUR CAREER OPPORTUNITIES WITH A GLOBAL NETWORK We are pleased to invite you to showcase career and academic opportunities on the International Academy of Nutrition Educators (IANE) portal .   IANE is a global, membership-based academy run by the NNEdPro Global Institute, dedicated to capacity building and professional development in nutrition education, research, and practice. Our platform connects professionals, students, and institutions across six continents.   You are welcome to submit listings including: 🔹 PhD opportunities 🔹 Academic or clinical job openings 🔹 Research or teaching placements 🔹 Internships and fellowships   📢 For a limited time, posting opportunities on our portal is completely free – helping you reach a wide, international audience of nutrition, health, and education professionals.   👉 Submit your opportunities here .   Take advantage of this unique opportunity to connect with a global talent pool! If you have any questions or need assistance, feel free to reach out to us. BECOME A REVIEWER FOR BMJ NUTRITION, PREVENTION & HEALTH We encourage all members to actively engage in the scientific community. By becoming a  reviewer  for BMJ Nutrition, Prevention & Health, you have the chance to stay up-to-date with the latest literature, advance your career, and establish your expertise and reputation in the field. Express your interest by reaching out to us at  info.nutrition@bmj.com .     Online First Alerts  - Ensure you stay ahead in your field by signing up  here  to receive alerts for Online First content in BMJ Nutrition, Prevention & Health. Be the first to access new publications and stay informed.      Visit the BMJ Nutrition, Prevention & Health  webpage for more detailed information on editorial policies, open access, and author guidelines. SHOWCASE YOUR RESEARCH WITH THE IKANN REGISTRY Are you conducting research in food, nutrition, sustainable agriculture, or health?   Register your study on the iKANN Independent Research Registry  to boost its visibility, uphold transparency, and connect with a global community of researchers.   Whether your project is ongoing or already completed, registering helps ensure quality, ethical standards, and long-term impact.   Bonus:  Registered researchers receive 20% off article processing charges in BMJ Nutrition, Prevention & Health and 20% off IANE membership.   👉 Submit or update your research today BE AWARE The official websites of NNEdPro Global Institute and its subsidiaries are listed below. Please note that any other websites with similar names which do not conform to these URLs are not run by us and do not represent our organisation: www.nnedpro.org.uk vle.nnedpro.org.uk www.iane.online www.createacademy.online www.mtki.org www.nutritionresearchregistry.org Anna Edesia, named after "Annapurna" (the Ancient Indian deity of food and nourishment) and "Edesia" (the Ancient Roman goddess of food), is NNEdPro's platform for highlighting our ongoing work, providing a snapshot of our key projects, ongoing research outputs and related publications - including from our flagship journal, BMJ Nutrition, Prevention and Health. ​ Since 2023, Anna Edesia has been published in the form of blogs , continuing to share insights into our key projects, research, and publications. From June 2021 to June 2023, Anna Edesia was a quarterly magazine, and before that, it was shared as newsletters .

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  • South East & East Asia | NNEdPro

    < Regional Networks page NNEdpro-IANE south east & east Asia network Current Activities Awards Read our blog posts Combatting COVID - Malay Combatting COVID - Chinese The official launch event of the South East & East Asia Network was held in December 2020. Check out the agenda here . This network has representatives from Brunei, China, Kazakhstan, Malaysia and Singapore. Key Aims Strengthen the Nutrition workforce in the region through education and training opportunities Enable positive interactions between the Nutrition workforce and other health professionals Organise an Annual Regional Meeting to share and showcase examples of good practice Co-Leads Geeta Appannah Network Co-Lead Prof. Norlaila Mustafa Network Co-Lead Mary Chong Network Co-Lead Siti Rohaiza Ahmad Deputy Network Co-Lead members Abdullah Mawas Anne Cunningham Chim Lang Eleanor Beck Emily Krueger Emma Polhil Faith Pui See Tang Halima Jama Helena Trigueiro Hiroya Takamatsu Hosanna Mateo-Maghirang Hung Nguyen Ngoc Jeffrey Koh Johan Docx Jorgen Johnsen Kathy Martyn Kefeng Yang Lidong Wang Masa Fukata Mei Yen Chan Minha Rajput-Ray Nate Jensen Nhi Hanh Nguyen Shakila Banu Praosiri Charusalaipong Saeeda Ahmed Sagun Paudel Shailaja Fennel Tam Lac Teoh Eng Sia Terms of reference

  • UK & Ireland | NNEdPro

    < Regional Networks page NNEdpro-iane United Kingdom & ireland Network Current Activities Incorporating three regional network sections: ⁃ English & Welsh Section ⁃ Scottish Section ⁃ Irish Section The NNEdPro-IANE Regional Network of UK & Ireland was officially launched at its annual meeting in Brighton on 6th November 2019 and will be managed on behalf of the NNEdPro Global Institute by ERimNN (the Education and Research in Medical Nutrition Network) in conjunction with the Lord Rana Foundation Charitable Trust and co-led by Dr Kathy Martyn and Professor Sumantra Ray. Vision The UK & Ireland Regional Network believe that working together to improve nutrition education, practice and research in health and social care, public health and education increases professional engagement in nutrition and improves patient and population wellbeing Mission The UK & Ireland network brings together professionals from different disciplines with expertise in nutrition education, research, and practice. Through working collaboratively, harnessing collective expertise, and listening to the voices and opinions of people from different communities, the UK & Ireland network will support sustainable and equitable change and improvement in food systems from production to consumption, and in health and social care practice. Aims To create a platform for stakeholder engagement and conversations, to share knowledge and expertise to further improve, sustainable and equitable food systems. KPI – hosting of regional meetings with representation from network members and key stakeholders with the invited representation of key stakeholders, that address the 2021/22 priorities identified by the UK & Ireland Network. To encourage innovative research and practice that addresses selected nutrition issues that affect people in communities, and in health and social context. To synthesise and disseminate cross-border nutrition policy and guidance, research and evidence-informed practise through the development of briefing papers. KPI - to collate and present case studies of nutrition research, education, or implementation best practice at the regional meetings in England, Wales, Scotland & N. Ireland, and Ireland Provide education meetings and dissemination of research in nutrition education and practice to the devolved countries of the United Kingdom, and input to iKANN (International Knowledge Application Network in Nutrition 2025) and BMJ Nutrition, Prevention and Health. Provide guidance and support in the development and sharing of research undertaken in the UK & N. Ireland and Ireland regional network. The NNEdPro-ERimNN UK & Ireland Regional Network seeks to support key cross-regional network objectives including the Nutrition Implementation Coalitio n, NEPHELP (Nutrition Education Policy for Healthcare Practice) and MTK (Mobile Teaching Kitchen) . Launch Event Read our blog post! Read Now Steering Committee Kathy Martyn Network Co-Lead & Section Co-Lead for England and Wales Sumantra Ray Network Co-Lead & Section Lead for Scotland Pauline Douglas Network Co-Lead & Section Lead for Northern Ireland and Ireland Members England and Wales Led by Dr Kathy Martin Abdullah Mawas Abigail Kaplan-Ramage Abhinav Bhansali Adrian Park Alan Flanagan Ali Ahsan Khalid Alice Benskin Allisha Beckett Ally Jaffae Amaeze Madukah Amandeep Chopra Amitava Banerjee Anant Jani Ananya Ria Roy Andreas V. Hadjinicolaou Andy Burman Animesh Acharjee Anita Nathan Ankita Debnath Anne Walsh Anuprita Shukla Aqil Jaigirdar Arjun Panesar Artika Datta Ashleigh Simpson Ben Atkinson BrianOg Murphy Carla Martins Caroline Bovey Celina Weigel Celine Tabche Charles Capper Charlotte Summers Chris Grayson Christine Baldwin Christine Delon Christopher Osuafor Claudia Mitrofan Colette Shortt David Armstrong David Unwin Deborah Davids Dominic Crocombe Dora Pereira Duane Mellor Ebiambu Agwara Ela Augustyniak *Elaine MacAninch Elango Vijaykumar Elif Karanis Elspeth Alstead Elspeth Hall Emily Fallon Emily Haynes Esha Dandekar Esther Appiah-Yeboah Faye Wheller Federica Amati Fiona Lavelle Fotini Tsofliou Frank Greenwood Gabriele Mocciaro Giorgia Perri Glenys Jones Grigorina Mitrofan Gurpinder Lalli Hala El Shafi Hannah Hayes Hardeep Lotay Harrison Carter Helen Rutherford Hung Nguyen Ngoc Iain Broadley Ianthi Tsimpli Ignacio Alcalde Ilakkiya Ezhilmaran James Bradfield James Bryant Jamie Lee Janet Cade Jeffrie Quarsie Jennifer James Jenny Blythe Jeremy Woodward Jo Cecil Joan Gandy Jodie Webber Jorgen Johnsen Josephine Ruwende Joshua Clamp Juan Felipe Sandoval Rueda Juliet Burridge Juliet Vickar Kaninika Basu Karuna Tandon Kate Guberg Kathleen Lyons Kathrina Crystallis Laura Keaver Liana Constantinescu Linda Kwabi Lisa Sharkey Lois Brown Louis Samuel Luigi Palla *Luke Buckner Lydia Smith Manelle Ramadan Manik Imsirovic Margaret Ashwell Maria Papagiannaki Maria Traka Mariam Molokhia Marianthi Firoglani Moschi Marie-Ann van Ginkel Marietta Sayegh Marjorie Lima do Vale Marla Fuchs Mathilde Haas Mayara de Paula Michele Vacca Michelle Venables Mina Gupta Mohamad Farshard Aslam Mohammad Sayeem Moushumi Baruah Nadia Al Shadhir Nathan Nagel Nida Ziauddeen Niky Raja Nina Jhita Niraj Kumar Nouira Mohamed Salah Oleksandra Kalyta Olusola (Sola) Idowu Patricia Mogrovejo Priyanka Kotak Rachael Churm Rafatu Tahiru Rajna Golubic Ramya Rajaram Ran Crooke Razan Algarni Rebecca Fisher Rebecca Houghton Rekha Bhangaonkar Richard Pinder Rishi Caleyachetty Ronita Bardhan Rosemary Stennett Roshni Kumar Rosie Gilbert Russell Parkinson Ryan Janjuha Saakshi Sharma Saeeda Ahmed SafiyaVirji Salman Rawaf Samyyia Ashraf Sanjay Bhattacherjee Sanjoy Deb Sarah Armes Sarah Prior Sarah Wong Savvas Xystouris Sawsan Ebaji Seeromanie Harding Selvarani Elahi Shailaja Fennel Shakila Banu Sharan Parimalan Shelley Pigott Shilpa Nagarajan Shivali Bhammer Shobhana Nagraj Shujun Li Simon Poole Sophie Ognjenovic Souzana Ioakeimidou Sreenivasa Rao Kondapally Seshasai Steve Kerridge Sue Fitzpatrick Susan Lanham-New Suzana Almoosawi Tantely Ratsitovah Tasnim Alam Thalia Sparling Thierry le Goff Tim Eden Tim Newman Vidya Mohamed Ali Vince Kelly Vincent Sai Vipan Bharadwaj Vittoria Romano Yemisi Osho MBE Zahra Kamini Zola Ndondita Zubeda Karim Northern Ireland & Ireland Led by Prof Pauline Douglas Anne Griffin (Republic of Ireland) Bethany Duffy (Northern Ireland) Catherine Hughes Chris Gill (Northern Ireland) Clare Chadda (Northern Ireland) Edris Adel (Republic of Ireland) Emily Krueger (Northern Ireland) Eoin Ryan (Republic of Ireland) Helene McNulty (Northern Ireland) John O'Brien (Republic of Ireland) Joseph Niwagaba (Republic of Ireland) Josephine Murphy Kirsty Pourshahidi (Northern Ireland) Laura Keaver (Republic of Ireland) Leane Hoey (Northern Ireland) Lynsey Montgomery (Northern Ireland) Manash Chatterjee (Republic of Ireland) Mary Ward (Northern Ireland) Michelle Clements (Northern Ireland) Nicola Foster (Northern Ireland) Ruth Price (Northern Ireland) Sameer Seth (Northern Ireland) Shane Gordon (Northern Ireland) Sile Griffin (Republic of Ireland) Whitney Vale-Hagan (Northern Ireland) Scotland Led by Prof Sumantra Ray Alex Johnstone Andrew Lang Beth Fitzsimmons Debbie Nelson Fiona Kilcullen Jules Griffin Kantesh Chowdhury Kathleen McLeod Katie Baxter Kichelle Williams-Robinson Maja Gach Marcello Scopazzini Marta Lonnie Minha Rajput-Ray Nikitah Rajput-Ray Rauf Khalid Ravi Mohan Lal Rebecca McCagh Rosie Brooks Santosh Gaihre Sarah Sullivan Sarah-Jane Reilly Stephen McKenna Suvetha Manoharan Tracey Toal Wanja Nyaga Yagnaseni Bhattacharya *Currently on leave of absence.

  • USA | NNEdPro

    < Regional Networks page NNEdpro-iane USA Regional Network Current Activities Launched on July 28, 2019: The NNEdPro-IANE USA Regional Network is a collaboration of dietitians, doctors, academics, medical and health care educators, researchers students and professional associations in the United States of America. Key Aims Enabling knowledge exchange between the US and I-KANN-25 Advocating the prioritisation of nutrition capacity building in the US healthcare system Pilot the NNEdPro Mobile teaching Kitchen Project for marginalised populations in the USA Implement and evaluation potential international models of nutrition education in the USA Launch Event Read our blog post! Read Now Co-Leads interested parties Download Elizabeth Helzner Network Co-Lead Martin Kohlmeier Network Co-Lead members Abdullah Mawas Aimee Afable Alice Benskin Aliza Stark Alka Gupta Arshan Goudarzi Amelia Storck Brenda Bohn Carine Lenders Charlotte Pratt Cindy Munkhgerel Dan Maunder Daniel Dayen Danvy Truong Dar Yoffe David Sharp Deborah Kennedy Dorothy Nankanja Elizabeth Helzner Eloisa Trinidad Emmanuel Baah Emily Johnston Emily Katz Emily Krueger Esther Appiah-Yeboah Filippa Juul Frank Greenwood Golbahar Yazdanifar Grigorina Mitrofan Gwen Twillman Hsiao-Liang Pai Hung Nguyen Ngoc Isobel Contento Jasia Steinmetz Jeffrey Bohn Jen Shamro Jessica Carmila John Jessica Daly Jie Zhu Juliet Vickar Kai Kagbo Kate Burbank Kathleen Duemling Kathrina Crystallis Lisa Goldberg Margarita Taran-Garcia Maria Korre Mariana Markell Marilyn S. Edwards Melina Jampolis Neda Sedora-Roman Neha Kumar Nicole Brandt Nicole Farmer Norbert Goldfield Nouira Mohamed Salah Olivia Lawler Pao-Hwa Lin Patricia Mogrovejo Paula Littlejohn Raana Iqbal Rachel Daeger Randy Pothen Rasarie Wimalana Rebecca Johnson Rebecca Rudel Robert Hay Robert Neda Rory Langan Saad Mouti Samuel Degenhard Scott Nichols Shakuntala Thilsted Shivani Bhat Tecla Coleman Terri Stone Tiffany Powell-Wiley Tirna Purkait Travis Masterson Vander Carter Virginia (Ginnie) Uhley Virginie Zoumenou Zola Ndondita Zorita Sconta Zubaida Qamar Terms of reference

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