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Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Workshop Agenda ." Institute of Medicine. 2007. Nutritional Risk Assessment: Perspectives, Methods, and Data Challenges: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11940.
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A
Workshop Agenda

Nutritional Risk Assessment: Bridging Perspectives, Sharing Methodologies, Identifying Data Challenges


The National Academies

2100 C Street, NW

Washington, D.C.


February 28–March 1, 2007

Objective: The workshop will serve as a forum for experts on various disciplines to:

  • discuss the strengths and challenges in using risk assessment tools to inform dietary and nutritional recommendations,

  • explore the use of risk assessment tools to evaluate standards for nutrient intake and the relationship of diet and nutrition to chronic disease risk, and

  • identify next steps necessary to advance in these areas.

DAY 1—NAS AUDITORIUM

8:00–9:00 am

Registration

INTRODUCTION

9:00 am

Welcome from Food Forum

Catherine Woteki, Mars Inc.

 

Objectives of the Meeting

Robert Buchanan, Food and Drug Administration

Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Workshop Agenda ." Institute of Medicine. 2007. Nutritional Risk Assessment: Perspectives, Methods, and Data Challenges: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11940.
×

SESSION 1
RISK ASSESSMENT AND NUTRITION: BUILDING PERSPECTIVES

Moderator

Laina Bush, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services

9:30 am

Overview of Risk Assessment: What Are the Questions That Risk Assessments Tools Can Answer? How Might This Relate to Nutrition Risk Assessment?

 

Joseph Rodricks, ENVIRON International Corporation

10:00 am

Overview of Current Issues in Nutrition: What Are the Questions and Challenges in Nutrition? How Might Risk Assessment Help to Address Nutrition Questions?

 

Shiriki Kumanyika, University of Pennsylvania

10:30–11:00 am

BREAK

 

Discussants:

11:00 am

  1. Industry Perspective: How Does the Food Industry Use Risk Assessment Tools?

 

Kathryn Wiemer, General Mills

11:20 am

  1. Public Policy/Government Perspective: How Does the Government Use Risk Assessment Tools?

 

William Dietz, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

11:40 am

Open Discussion

12:15–1:30 pm

LUNCH

Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Workshop Agenda ." Institute of Medicine. 2007. Nutritional Risk Assessment: Perspectives, Methods, and Data Challenges: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11940.
×

SESSION 2
SHARING METHODOLOGIES: CURRENT USES OF NUTRITIONAL RISK ASSESSMENT

Questions:

  1. How have different groups used risk assessment methodologies to establish upper intake levels?

  2. What are the data gaps to assess risk from excess nutrient intakes and establish better upper nutrient intake levels?

  3. Can risk assessment tools help in establishing nutrient requirments? If so, what tools would be useful?

Moderator: Molly Kretsch, USDA

1:30 pm

The IOM Process to Establish Tolerable Upper Intake Levels: Model and Data Needs

Robert Russell, Tufts University

2:00 pm

Potential Connections Between Establishing Nutrient Requirements and Tolerable Upper Intake Levels

Suzanne Murphy, University of Hawaii

2:30 pm

Nutrient Risk Assessment: Lessons Learned from the FAO/WHO Technical Workshop

Christine Taylor, Institute of Medicine

3:00 pm

BREAK

3:30 pm

Implications of Using Conservative Assumptions in Nutritional Risk Assessments

Barbara Petersen, Exponent

4:00 pm

Commentary

Sanford Miller, University of Maryland

4:10 pm

Open Discussion

5:00 pm

Adjourn

Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Workshop Agenda ." Institute of Medicine. 2007. Nutritional Risk Assessment: Perspectives, Methods, and Data Challenges: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11940.
×

DAY 2—Lecture Room

8:00–9:00 am

Registration

9:00 am

Welcome

Michael Doyle, University of Georgia Food Forum Chair

SESSION 3
SHARING METHODOLOGIES: DIET/FOOD PATTERNS AND HEALTH OUTCOMES

Questions:

  1. What are the challenges encountered when establishing relationships between diet/food consumption patterns and health or risk of disease?

  2. What approaches are currently used to establish diet/food consumption patterns and health or risk of disease relationships?

  3. What kind of risk assessment tools and models could be best used or adapted for evaluating associations between nutrition and health or disease risks?

  4. How should nutritional studies be designed in order to provide information and data useful for nutritional risk assessments?

Moderator: Michael Doyle

9:15 am

Challenges in Establishing Relationships Between Diet Patterns and Health Outcomes

Julie Mares, University of Wisconsin

9:45 am

Evaluation of Health Claims in Nutrition Labeling

Kathleen C. Ellwood, Food and Drug Administration

10:15–10:45 am

BREAK

10:45 am

Evidence-based Review Process to Link Dietary Factors with Chronic Disease: Heart Disease and Diet as a Case Study

Alice Lichtenstein, Tufts University

Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Workshop Agenda ." Institute of Medicine. 2007. Nutritional Risk Assessment: Perspectives, Methods, and Data Challenges: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11940.
×

11:15 am

Key Challenges in Risk-Based Approaches to Nutrition Policy

Gregory Paoli, Decisionalysis Risk Consultants

11:45 am

Open Discussion

12:15–1:30 pm

LUNCH

SESSION 4
IDENTIFYING DATA NEEDS AND OVERCOMING CHALLENGES

Questions:

  • What is the future potential contribution to nutrition risk assessment of new methods for describing population variability with regard to nutrient bioavailability, and physiological and or genomic responses to nutrients and food components?

  • What is the future potential contribution to nutrition risk assessment of new methods for quantitatively describing population variability regarding food and nutrient intake levels?

  • What are the current status and future needs for food composition data to meet the challenges of nutrition risk assessment?

Moderator: Bob Buchanan, FDA

1:30 pm

The Role of Nutrigenomics and Population Variability in Nutritional Risk Assessment

John Milner, National Cancer Institute National Institutes of Health

2:00 pm

Dietary Intake and Exposure Assessment in Nutritional Risk Assessment

Amy Subar, National Cancer Institute National Institutes of Health

2:30 pm

Nutrients and Food Composition: Data Needs

Joanne Holden, Agricultural Research Service U.S. Department of Agriculture

3:00–3:30 pm

BREAK

Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Workshop Agenda ." Institute of Medicine. 2007. Nutritional Risk Assessment: Perspectives, Methods, and Data Challenges: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11940.
×

SESSION 5
WRAP-UP: PERSPECTIVES ON CHALLENGES AND SOLUTIONS

Moderator: Bob Buchanan, Food and Drug Administration

3:30 pm

What Did We Hear and What Are the Next Steps?

 

Industry: Catherine Woteki, Mars, Inc

 

Government: Barbara Schneeman, Food and Drug Administration

 

Risk Assessor: Gregory Paoli, Decisionalysis Risk Consultants

 

Consumer: Darlene Adkins, National Consumers League

 

Public Health: Laina Bush, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services

4:20 pm

Open Discussion

5: 00 pm

Adjourn

Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Workshop Agenda ." Institute of Medicine. 2007. Nutritional Risk Assessment: Perspectives, Methods, and Data Challenges: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11940.
×
Page 99
Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Workshop Agenda ." Institute of Medicine. 2007. Nutritional Risk Assessment: Perspectives, Methods, and Data Challenges: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11940.
×
Page 100
Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Workshop Agenda ." Institute of Medicine. 2007. Nutritional Risk Assessment: Perspectives, Methods, and Data Challenges: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11940.
×
Page 101
Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Workshop Agenda ." Institute of Medicine. 2007. Nutritional Risk Assessment: Perspectives, Methods, and Data Challenges: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11940.
×
Page 102
Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Workshop Agenda ." Institute of Medicine. 2007. Nutritional Risk Assessment: Perspectives, Methods, and Data Challenges: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11940.
×
Page 103
Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Workshop Agenda ." Institute of Medicine. 2007. Nutritional Risk Assessment: Perspectives, Methods, and Data Challenges: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11940.
×
Page 104
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For more than two decades, the practice of risk assessment has been applied to human public health issues, and policy makers have used the results of risk assessments in their decision-making process. Approaches for risk assessment have been developed for nonnutrients such as drugs, food additives, and pesticides, but approaches for risk assessment have received less attention in the nutrition area. Some aspects of the risk assessment approach used for nonnutrients are applicable to the assessment of risks related to nutrition. The overall approach, however, must be adapted and modified to take into account the unique aspects of nutrients, including the fact that both high and low nutrient intakes are associated with risk. Experience with the application of a risk assessment process to the setting of upper levels of intake for essential nutrients, for example, has uncovered a number of challenges. Adapting and developing risk assessment strategies for application in nutrition science could lead to improved approaches to the development of dietary and nutritional recommendations and thus is a topic of considerable interest.

One nonscientific but overall challenge to nutritional risk assessment relates to increasing and improving communication among experts from key disciplines in ways that could inform the nutritional risk assessment process. Among these key disciplines are nutrition, toxicology, dietary exposure assessment, economics, risk analysis, and epidemiology. How can the perspectives and methods of these diverse fields be brought together to develop more effective approaches for quantitative nutritional risk assessment? How can they be applied to a spectrum of topics related to food and nutrition—micronutrients, macronutrients, dietary supplements, whole foods, food groups, and dietary patterns? How can they help overcome the data challenges that confront nutritional risk assessors?

As a step toward improving the communication and sharing methods and information across disciplines, members of the Interagency Risk Assessment Consortium, the U.S. Health and Human Services Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation, the Institute of Medicine's Food Forum, and the International Life Sciences Institute planned the Nutritional Risk Assessment Workshop. The workshop was held on February 28 and March 1, 2007, in Washington, D.C. This workshop, which was envisioned as one in a series, focused on opening a dialogue to explore the unique questions and challenges faced by nutritionists and the potential use of risk assessment methodologies to answer them. Nutritional Risk Assessment : Perspectives, Methods, and Data Challenges, Workshop Summary summarizes the happenings of this workshop.

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