Proceedings of the workshop ‘Biofortified food - Working together to get more nutritious food to the table in India’

HarvestPlus is the global leader in biofortification and has been leading biofortification efforts in India for nearly a decade. A workshop hosted by HarvestPlus was held in April 2019 in New Delhi to discuss ways to increase the scale, reach and impact of naturally nutritious (biofortified) foods i...

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Main Authors: Mitra-Ganguli, Tora, Boyd, Katrina, Uchitelle-Pierce, Benjamin, Walton, Jenny
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Elsevier 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/145603
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author Mitra-Ganguli, Tora
Boyd, Katrina
Uchitelle-Pierce, Benjamin
Walton, Jenny
author_browse Boyd, Katrina
Mitra-Ganguli, Tora
Uchitelle-Pierce, Benjamin
Walton, Jenny
author_facet Mitra-Ganguli, Tora
Boyd, Katrina
Uchitelle-Pierce, Benjamin
Walton, Jenny
author_sort Mitra-Ganguli, Tora
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description HarvestPlus is the global leader in biofortification and has been leading biofortification efforts in India for nearly a decade. A workshop hosted by HarvestPlus was held in April 2019 in New Delhi to discuss ways to increase the scale, reach and impact of naturally nutritious (biofortified) foods in India by working in partnership with the food industry. This paper summarizes the output of that 2-day workshop. Harvest Plus is a not-for-profit organization that works with its partners to tackle hidden hunger and malnutrition. It leads the global effort to develop biofortified staple crops, explore their acceptability, efficacy and effectiveness, and scale up their availability to rural and urban populations who may not have access to diverse diet, fortified foods or supplements. Scaling the reach and impact of biofortified food through foods systems is a key strategy for HarvestPlus. In this regard, HarvestPlus has conducted research into the barriers for scale-up and co-created solutions to overcoming those barriers through partnership with the food industry. During this workshop, it emerged that there is significant demand from the food industry who see value in biofortification to both their business and the health of their customers and the country. Small working groups explored specific opportunities around supply chains, food products and composition, and consumers & markets. Several common themes emerged from the deliberations. All three groups identified lack of awareness as a major barrier to scale. More data on the health and nutrition impacts, as well as consumer and market research, is critically needed to build the food industry’s understanding of biofortified foods. Ensuring supply chain integrity, meeting manufacturing product standards, and developing strategic messaging for consumers were also mentioned repeatedly. Ending hidden hunger and managing a profitable food business can be done simultaneously and sustainably. By addressing the barriers to embedding biofortification into the food system, HarvestPlus aims to increase the access that families and communities have to nutritious seeds and foods.
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spelling CGSpace1456032024-10-25T07:55:52Z Proceedings of the workshop ‘Biofortified food - Working together to get more nutritious food to the table in India’ Mitra-Ganguli, Tora Boyd, Katrina Uchitelle-Pierce, Benjamin Walton, Jenny supply chains biofortification malnutrition nutrition barriers fortified foods workshops iron zinc HarvestPlus is the global leader in biofortification and has been leading biofortification efforts in India for nearly a decade. A workshop hosted by HarvestPlus was held in April 2019 in New Delhi to discuss ways to increase the scale, reach and impact of naturally nutritious (biofortified) foods in India by working in partnership with the food industry. This paper summarizes the output of that 2-day workshop. Harvest Plus is a not-for-profit organization that works with its partners to tackle hidden hunger and malnutrition. It leads the global effort to develop biofortified staple crops, explore their acceptability, efficacy and effectiveness, and scale up their availability to rural and urban populations who may not have access to diverse diet, fortified foods or supplements. Scaling the reach and impact of biofortified food through foods systems is a key strategy for HarvestPlus. In this regard, HarvestPlus has conducted research into the barriers for scale-up and co-created solutions to overcoming those barriers through partnership with the food industry. During this workshop, it emerged that there is significant demand from the food industry who see value in biofortification to both their business and the health of their customers and the country. Small working groups explored specific opportunities around supply chains, food products and composition, and consumers & markets. Several common themes emerged from the deliberations. All three groups identified lack of awareness as a major barrier to scale. More data on the health and nutrition impacts, as well as consumer and market research, is critically needed to build the food industry’s understanding of biofortified foods. Ensuring supply chain integrity, meeting manufacturing product standards, and developing strategic messaging for consumers were also mentioned repeatedly. Ending hidden hunger and managing a profitable food business can be done simultaneously and sustainably. By addressing the barriers to embedding biofortification into the food system, HarvestPlus aims to increase the access that families and communities have to nutritious seeds and foods. 2019-10-08 2024-06-21T09:04:43Z 2024-06-21T09:04:43Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/145603 en Open Access Elsevier Mitra-Ganguli, Tora; Boyd, Katrina; Uchitelle-Pierce, Benjamin; and Walton, Jenny. 2019. Proceedings of the workshop ‘Biofortified food - Working together to get more nutritious food to the table in India’. Journal of Nutrition and Intermediary Metabolism 18(December 2019): 100100. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jnim.2019.100100
spellingShingle supply chains
biofortification
malnutrition
nutrition
barriers
fortified foods
workshops
iron
zinc
Mitra-Ganguli, Tora
Boyd, Katrina
Uchitelle-Pierce, Benjamin
Walton, Jenny
Proceedings of the workshop ‘Biofortified food - Working together to get more nutritious food to the table in India’
title Proceedings of the workshop ‘Biofortified food - Working together to get more nutritious food to the table in India’
title_full Proceedings of the workshop ‘Biofortified food - Working together to get more nutritious food to the table in India’
title_fullStr Proceedings of the workshop ‘Biofortified food - Working together to get more nutritious food to the table in India’
title_full_unstemmed Proceedings of the workshop ‘Biofortified food - Working together to get more nutritious food to the table in India’
title_short Proceedings of the workshop ‘Biofortified food - Working together to get more nutritious food to the table in India’
title_sort proceedings of the workshop biofortified food working together to get more nutritious food to the table in india
topic supply chains
biofortification
malnutrition
nutrition
barriers
fortified foods
workshops
iron
zinc
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/145603
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