USDA Puts $4.5M into Additional Nutrition Hubs
Applications for the Nutrition Hub award program will be accepted through Oct. 3, 2024.
The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) has $4.5 million in funding to establish three additional USDA Nutrition Hubs in communities across the country. The new Nutrition Hubs will provide tailored and scalable approaches to equitably advance food and nutrition security and help prevent diet-related chronic diseases, especially in historically underserved communities.
The Hubs will create a network that builds on the work of the pilot Nutrition Hub established last year in partnership with Southern University and A&M College under USDA’s Agricultural Science Center of Excellence for Nutrition and Diet for Better Health (ASCEND for Better Health) initiative.
With funding provided by the National Institute of Food and Agriculture’s (NIFA) Agriculture and Food Research Initiative (AFRI) — the nation’s leading competitive grants program for agricultural sciences — the Nutrition Hubs will focus on providing science-based information tailored to priority communities of interest including Tribal, Hispanic and Insular Areas.
The Nutrition Hubs will complement and increase the impact of USDA’s collective contributions to extension, education and research communities, and underserved communities at large, to better understand real-world opportunities and challenges around nutrition and diet-related health disparities and to develop coordinated science-based solutions and resources that benefit those communities.
“Equitable access to healthy, safe and affordable foods that promote optimal health and well-being can have a significant impact in reducing rates of diet-related chronic diseases including many cancers,” said Dr. Chavonda Jacobs-Young, USDA chief scientist and under secretary for Research, Education and Economics. “When people have tailored tools, resources and knowledge, they are empowered to take a more active role in managing their nutrition and health.”
Each Nutrition Hub will address program area priorities through the lens of precision nutrition, which is defined as nutrition tailored to different population subgroups based on integrating data for that subgroup. Findings from precision nutrition research will result in targeted development of nutritional recommendations and messaging for individual subpopulations, rather than a “one-size-fits-all” approach to dietary guidance.
““The goal of this program area priority is to stimulate and catalyze cross-cutting and interdisciplinary work among scientists and stakeholders that will reduce the incidence of diet-related diseases while building current and future workforce capacity," said USDA NIFA Director Dr. Manjit K. Misra.
Over the long-term, each Nutrition Hub will work with priority populations to develop and share science-based nutrition information and foster research and training opportunities in human nutrition research to advance food and nutrition security, particularly in underserved and underrepresented communities.
Applications for this new award program are being accepted through October 3, 2024. For more information and to register, visit the NIFA.
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