The evidence review: the key step in the development of FBDGs
Date: 09 July 2019
Introduction by: Fatima Hachem, Senior Nutrition Officer, Nutrition and Food Systems Division, FAO
Presenters:
- Ana Islas and Ramani Wijesinha-Bettoni, Nutrition Officers, Nutrition Education and Consumer Awareness Team, Nutrition and Food Systems Division, FAO
- Joyce Kinabo, Professor, Sokoine University of Agriculture, Tanzania
- Gabriela Rosero Mora, Coordinator of the FBDGs process, Ecuador
Moderator: Melissa Vargas, Nutrition and Food Systems Consultant, FAO headquarters
Recording: fao.adobeconnect.com/p6grfbinhytx/
Abstract: A solid evidence base is a pre-requisite for food-based dietary guidelines (FBDGs) to be able to address country-specific nutrition needs while being socially, culturally and economically appropriate. With the increasing burden of overweight and obesity and other modern sustainable development challenges, the evidence base must thus reflect these evolving considerations. In addition, amidst increasing pressures from commercial interests and civil society/academia’s questioning of the integrity of dietary advice, maintaining transparency and high standards in the evidence review of FBDGs has become a critical issue.
However, with the exception of some countries, not much is known about the actual methods used and activities carried out during the FBDGs evidence review process. This webinar addressed some of these gaps focusing on the following questions:
- Why is the evidence review a key step in the development of FBDGs?
- What are the main processes involved? What is the current FAO process for conducting an evidence review?
- What are some challenges and responses in LMICs?
The webinar also highlighted two country cases and present FAO’s current work in this field.