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Rudd Center
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 21 พ.ย. 2008
The Rudd Center for Food Policy & Health at the University of Connecticut is a non-profit research and public policy organization devoted to improving the world's diet, preventing obesity, and reducing weight stigma. The Rudd Center serves as a leader in building broad-based consensus to change diet and activity patterns, while holding industry and government agencies responsible for safeguarding public health. The Center serves as a leading research institution and clearinghouse for resources that add to our understanding of the complex forces affecting how we eat, how we stigmatize overweight and obese people, and how we can change.
How To Find Your Local School Wellness Policy
A local wellness policy is a written document of official policies that guide a school district's efforts to establish a school environment that promotes students' health, well-being, and ability to learn by supporting healthy eating and physical activity.
Any school that participates in USDA Child Nutrition Programs must have a wellness policy on file as of school year 2017/2018.
This video is intended for people using the Wellness School Assessment Tool, or WellSAT 3.0, to assess their school district's wellness policy.
Learn more: wellsat.org
Any school that participates in USDA Child Nutrition Programs must have a wellness policy on file as of school year 2017/2018.
This video is intended for people using the Wellness School Assessment Tool, or WellSAT 3.0, to assess their school district's wellness policy.
Learn more: wellsat.org
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Compare and Summarize Your WellSAT Scores
มุมมอง 312 หลายเดือนก่อน
This video outlines Step 3 of the Triennial Assessment process for school wellness teams: comparing your scores and summarizing. Learn more: wellsat.org
Introduction to the Triennial Assessment
มุมมอง 1682 หลายเดือนก่อน
In this video, we will walk you through the steps to complete your school district's Triennial Wellness Policy Assessment. The USDA's Final Rule for Local School Wellness Policy Implementation requires all school food authorities to complete a review of their local school wellness policy every three years. Learn more: wellsat.org
Completing the WellSAT Practice
มุมมอง 2332 หลายเดือนก่อน
The WallSAT Practice was designed as a companion to the WallSAT Policy. The tool uses interviews to measure the extent to which practices are in place that match each of the WellSAT Policy items. Learn more: wellsat.org
How to Use the WellSAT Policy
มุมมอง 3512 หลายเดือนก่อน
This brief introduction to the WellSAT Policy outlines how to score your school wellness policies based on the degree to which it addresses 65 policy items. Learn more: wellsat.org
Introduction to the WellSAT Website
มุมมอง 1112 หลายเดือนก่อน
The WellSAT is a quantitative assessment tool to help you score and improve your local School Wellness Policy. Since 2010, this measure has been used by thousands of people across the country, representing school districts from every state. Learn more: wellsat.org
Supportive Obesity Care - Preview
มุมมอง 93 หลายเดือนก่อน
The Supportive Obesity Care website is designed to raise awareness of weight bias and equip clinicians with tools to provide respectful care to people of all body sizes. You can access the full suite of educational videos, podcasts, and handouts at: supportiveobesitycare.org
A Patient's Perspective of Weight Bias: Insights from Patty Nece
มุมมอง 353 หลายเดือนก่อน
Patty Nece describes what it is like to be a patient experiencing weight stigma in the healthcare setting. The Supportive Obesity Care website is designed to raise awareness of weight bias and equip clinicians with tools to provide respectful care to people of all body sizes. You can access the full suite of educational videos, podcasts, and handouts at: supportiveobesitycare.org
What is Weight Stigma?
มุมมอง 1433 หลายเดือนก่อน
In this video, Dr. Rebecca Puhl (Deputy Director, UConn Rudd Center for Food Policy and Health) provides a brief explanation of weight stigma, where it comes from, and how it can be recognized The Supportive Obesity Care website is designed to raise awareness of weight bias and equip clinicians with tools to provide respectful care to people of all body sizes. You can access the full suite of e...
Promises kept? Holding corporations accountable for their commitments to racial justice - Webinar
มุมมอง 161ปีที่แล้ว
U.S. corporations, through their products and political and business practices, directly impact our nation’s health and racial equity. Many made corporate commitments to advance racial justice in response to the murder of George Floyd in May 2020 and the subsequent public outcry demanding action. Join us to discuss the corporate racial justice pledges made through a health equity lens as we exp...
2019 Targeted Marketing Webinar
มุมมอง 3745 ปีที่แล้ว
A report released in January of 2019 highlights increasing disparities in unhealthy food advertising targeted to Hispanic and Black youth. Join the report's authors to hear how food and beverage companies continue to advertise their least healthy products, including candy, fast food, sugary drinks and snacks, to youth in communities of color, and learn what can be done to encourage food and bev...
Study: Minority Youth Bombarded by Junk Food Ads HLN Interview
มุมมอง 2155 ปีที่แล้ว
Study: Minority Youth Bombarded by Junk Food Ads HLN Interview
Jennifer Harris interview with KFXV FOX Harlingen TX
มุมมอง 2349 ปีที่แล้ว
Jennifer Harris interview with KFXV FOX Harlingen TX
Drink Delusions: Sugary Drink FACTS 2014
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Drink Delusions: Sugary Drink FACTS 2014
Building the Link: Science, Policy, and Health
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Building the Link: Science, Policy, and Health
Big Burger is Watching: Fast Food Marketing Undermines Parents
มุมมอง 40K11 ปีที่แล้ว
Big Burger is Watching: Fast Food Marketing Undermines Parents
Stacked Odds: Finding a Healthy Kids' Meal
มุมมอง 11K11 ปีที่แล้ว
Stacked Odds: Finding a Healthy Kids' Meal
Overview of Child Care Research by Kathryn Henderson, PhD
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Overview of Child Care Research by Kathryn Henderson, PhD
Senate Hearing on Energy Drinks Marketed to Children
มุมมอง 48711 ปีที่แล้ว
Senate Hearing on Energy Drinks Marketed to Children
Cereal Companies Use Misleading Messages To Advertise to Children
มุมมอง 4.7K11 ปีที่แล้ว
Cereal Companies Use Misleading Messages To Advertise to Children
Yet another call for more of other peoples' money.
Fat people are like liberals. All of the facts are right in front of them but they refuse to acknowledge them. Instead of blaming themselves for choosing to eat shit, they blame the people that make shit.
Heyyyyyyyyy
Soda taxes are inherently racist because they are targeted to affect Black and Latinx communities; the tax will mostly affect these communities, considering that some of these communities cannot even consume tap water safely and, as you have shown, they are heavily targeted by soda ads in the first place. The policy changes need to be geared towards the institutions and the companies, not the consumers. Food access is a policy issue more than a problem caused by the individual and making the consumer pay for this is not a fair move.
My teacher let me watch this video . Like if you too.
gimme the answers
@@tanzilhossain2693 LMFAOOO ms libert
@@subhisoles84 hahahaa
@@tanzilhossain2693 i can't
Are all of you in the same class or something?
on the chance that you're into McDonald's meals Giveaway you gotta test *_FreeBurger . me_* . (remove the spaces), this site is Responsible.
Why am I fat?.... Because you eat junk food. Eat healthy and you'll be healthy
UnadvisableCloud Weight is all about calories, not nutrition. There were fat people before there was junk food, there are fat people who eat no junk food, and there are UNDERweight people who eat nothing BUT junk food. If you consume more calories than you need, you'll get fat whether those calories come from cheeseburgers or huge portions of roast vegetables.
I appreciate that people are finally starting to talk about the enormous effects of junk food marketing. But I also disagree with the main point of this video that parents are powerless, no matter how hard they try. And that just a small exposure to junk food marketing will have the same effect as a very large exposure. Kids are spending over 4 hours per day (on average) watching TV and movies and over an hour per day (on average) on the internet. Parents could cut way back on that (the AAP recommends no more than 1-2 hours of screen-time per day). But whether 1 hour per day or 5 hours per day of screen time, there are now easy ways to cut out all the screen marketing. Instead of cable, switch to DVDs or Netflix or Amazon (no commercials). As for online, Firefox and other browsers now have ad blocking abilities. I understand that for someone very poor, electronic babysitters are a god-sent and that poor parents have to take whatever free babysitting services available (even those filled with predatory marketing). But far too many parents pay big money for commercial filled cable when they could switch to cheaper commercial-free alternatives. Or even better going very low-TV or even no-TV, which believe it not, still happens in this day and age.
Actually I saw that kid spend way more than 5 hours total. It was 8.5 hours on a regular day. (
This is strange to me. I ate all kinds of vegetables when I was younger. Some I didn't like, but most I did. Americans (USA) are a strange bunch. We are going against our evolution by not eating fresh vegetables and fruits
Thanks for sharing this little video. Wonderful to see advocates moving beyond the media messages regarding obesity and physical activity . .www.obesitythunderbay.ning.com
It's better to try to get them to understand things that are difficult to understand than to hide them. It's been shown in research and it's just common sense that hiding something makes kids want to see it more. So, by trying to hide it, you're actually making the problem worse. Even doing nothing at all is better than making it worse.
1) Not all marketing is obvious, a lot is subtle or subliminal and taken in subconsciously. Marketers know every trick in the book in this regard 2) How do you make a young child understand those sorts of concepts? They're essentially being marketed to from the day they're born. They have a very low capacity for critical thought until they reach their teens. Not saying it can't be done, but you have to admit that there's quite a low chance winning out over marketers and making such ideals stick
Parents should not try to HIDE anything from their kids. That's the worst thing to try to do. Just show them why advertising is bad, and anyone trying to get profit has a motive to lie to you and exploit you. Then you can safely let them see any advertisement as much as you want.