Collaboration for the Nutrition Field: Synthesis of Selected Literature
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Cited by (17)
Development and Application of a Framework to Assess Community Nutritionists' Use of Environmental Strategies to Prevent Obesity
2014, Journal of Nutrition Education and BehaviorCitation Excerpt :Because of the complexity of obesogenic environments,40 solutions require multisectoral partnerships. This means strong, sustainable, and highly engaged community collaborations41 among professionals and stakeholders with diverse expertise and varying degrees of power to directly effect environmental change. The 2-dimensional framework constructed in this study could be tested further with staff in other organizations or in training professionals in the skills necessary to take steps toward environmental change to prevent obesity.
Gerontological Nursing Leadership in the Advancing Excellence Campaign: Moving interdisciplinary collaboration forward
2014, Geriatric NursingCitation Excerpt :One way to move forward is for nurses to reach out to their own colleagues and other health care partners to form coalitions as a means to impact policy. A rich literature supports the use of coalitions to achieve health care reform goals and provides guidance for successful coalition building.4–9 Even though building coalitions is slow, painstaking, and complex, it is an important strategy for creating successful collaboration and achieving desired outcomes.
Review of Nutrition Education Research in the Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior, 1998 to 2007
2008, Journal of Nutrition Education and BehaviorCitation Excerpt :Clearly such interventions require collaboration among many groups at many levels of influence, bringing increased resources and reach, but also providing challenges. These challenges were described and solutions were offered in the Journal.51 The number of qualitative studies that were published also increased,33,52-54 and an entire issue of the Journal was devoted to such studies (Table).
Use of a participatory planning process as a way to build community food security
2002, Journal of the American Dietetic AssociationCitation Excerpt :A basic premise of citizen politics is that when persons with diverse interests come together to reframe and clarify an issue or concern they are better able to build a shared understanding of a problem and envision workable solutions (9–11). Various authors have emphasized the importance of building collaborations among community-based planners and grassroots and professional organizations skilled in interpersonal, group, and cross-cultural dynamics to effectively deal with nutrition, food security, and welfare reform (20–23). Such collaboration efforts consist of engaging in problem solving that requires diverse stakeholders to discuss their collective assumptions about each other and what the problem is; include leaders from all affected groups; and allow themselves to be influenced by, as well as to influence, those who are at the table (21)— however, differences in interests, attitudes, and values (6,24); lack of trust among stakeholders; and varying distributions of power and resources (17,25) are all factors that may constrain finding common ground around certain aspects of community food security.
Advancing Nutrition and Obesity Policy through Cross-Sector Collaboration: The Local Farms - Healthy Kids Initiative in Washington State
2013, Journal of Hunger and Environmental NutritionAdolescents' food preferences in China: Do household living arrangements matter?
2011, Social Work in Health Care
The production of this article was funded through a Cooperative Agreement (8-3198-7-11) between FNS, USDA, and JNE. The contents of this article do no necessarily reflect the views or policies of the USDA.