The Chellaram Programme for Healthy and Sustainable Diets will bring together researchers from the Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, the Oxford Martin School, the Department of Biology and the School of Geography and the Environment. The programme has been established through a £5 million philanthropic gift from the Chellaram Foundation.
Alongside the research activity, the programme will support doctoral students and early-career researchers through the Chellaram Scholars Programme. A dedicated public and policy engagement work strand will help ensure findings are shared with policymakers, practitioners, industry, civil society and the wider public. This will ensure that the people with power to make change have the latest evidence from the programme to guide them, and that the findings have a wide influence on society.
The programme launches at a time of growing international focus on the links between diet, chronic disease, climate change, biodiversity loss and animal welfare. While there is increasing evidence that a shift towards more plant-rich diets could bring benefits across these areas, there are major questions remaining about how these changes can be achieved in ways that are effective, equitable and acceptable to the public.
Led by Professor Peter Scarborough, Professor of Population Health at the University of Oxford’s Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences (NDPCHS), the programme will focus on dietary change (the factors that shape what people choose and consume) particularly in high income countries where current consumption patterns place significant pressure on health and environmental systems.
The programme will address three closely connected challenges: improving human health, reducing the environmental impact of food systems, and strengthening evidence on the animal welfare implications of intensive farming.
Many of the challenges associated with improving human health, improving animal welfare and protecting the environment can be tackled with the same solution: a move towards healthy plant-rich diets. The real question is how this can be achieved in practice. This programme will examine what works, in which settings and how evidence can support better policy and public health decision-making.- Professor Peter Scarborough, Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences
Research will include: studies on the health effects of plant-based protein alternatives; the environmental and animal welfare impacts of food production; the influence of online information, social media and food environments on dietary choices; and policy modelling to help decision-makers assess the likely health, environmental and animal welfare impacts of different interventions.
The Oxford Martin School facilitates interdisciplinary work on food throughout the University and this new programme will sit alongside the Future of Food programme.
Professor Sir Charles Godfray CBE FRS, Director of the Oxford Martin School, said:
‘Food systems sit at the centre of some of the most complex and interconnected challenges facing societies today. This programme draws on Oxford’s distinctive strength in bringing together researchers from different disciplines to generate evidence that can inform policy, practice and public debate. I am delighted that Oxford is partnering with the Chellaram Foundation on this exciting project.’
The Chellaram Foundation supports work across health, the environment, animal welfare and education. Its gift reflects the Foundation’s interest in research that addresses these connected priorities together, with education embedded through the Chellaram Scholars Programme.
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Mr Lal Chellaram, Founder and Chairman, The Chellaram Foundation, said: Professor Irene Tracey, CBE, FRS, FMedSci, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford, said: Professor Sir Aziz Sheikh OBE, Head of Department, Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, said: ‘NDPCHS is delighted to partner with Oxford Martin School to lead this important programme, that brings together Oxford’s strengths in primary care and public health, prevention, environmental sustainability and policy engagement. It has the potential to generate evidence that can inform practical action on healthier and more sustainable diets. The support for doctoral students and early-career researchers is particularly welcome. Building capacity in this field will be essential if research on healthy and sustainable diets is to translate into long-term public health benefit.’ |
Lal L. Chellaram, Founder of the Chellaram Foundation |