Texas A&M’s Director of Institute for Advancing Health Through Agriculture calls for a comprehensive approach to combat diet-related chronic diseases and rising health care costs

Dr.

Patrick Stover

testifies in front of full

House Committee on Agriculture

as part of “Innovation, Employment, Integrity, and Health: Opportunities for Modernization in Title IV” hearing.

WASHINGTON

,

June 9, 2023

/PRNewswire/ —

Patrick J. Stover

, Ph.D., director of the

Texas A&M


Institute for Advancing Health Through Agriculture

(IHA), testified in front of

the United States

House of Representatives Committee on Agriculture on

June 7

to document that swift action is needed to reverse the increasing rates of diet-related chronic diseases and their subsequent economic burden on health care systems and costs.

Given that many of the drivers of chronic disease are related to diet, health behaviors, and our food systems, Dr. Stover was poised to provide insightful comments on our healthcare burdens, saliently offering solutions. The IHA’s research aims to align Precision Nutrition, Responsive Agriculture, and Healthy Living as a solution to the pressing health crisis affecting all Americans. Medical costs associated with diet-related diabetes alone total more than

$327 billion

annually

.

“Agriculture and food are the only feasible solutions to address our skyrocketing health care costs. We need to develop a systems-based approach to connect agriculture, food, nutrition, and human health,” said Dr. Stover.

The committee hearing focused on federal nutrition programs, and Stover in his testimony cited the disproportionate impact of chronic diseases and food insecurity and associated costs on rural, underserved, and underrepresented communities, underscoring the urgent need for agriculture-centered, responsive solutions.

“We need to continue the work to eliminate hunger while expanding our mission to also ensure that our food environments promote human health,” said Dr. Stover. “Both the food environment that consumers experience, and consumer health behaviors need to be addressed together through sound policy grounded in high-quality scientific evidence that is lacking at this time.”

A strong evidence base is needed to ensure that policy is driven by the best science – to this end, Dr. Stover created the

Agriculture, Food, & Nutrition Evidence Center

at

Texas A&M University

. Dr. Stover also emphasized that

the United States

has made extraordinarily successful advances through nutrition and agriculture already, but that hunger and health must become the new endpoints for our food systems to adapt to if we are going to tackle the problem of chronic diseases.

“Farmers and ranchers have always been prepared to meet the needs and expectations of the nation, they feed America, and want to be part of the solution to help all Americans,” Stover emphasized.

Dr. Stover, an international leader in biochemistry, agriculture, and nutrition, is an elected member of the

National Academy of Sciences

and a fellow of the

American Association for the Advancement of Science

. He has more than two decades of academic leadership experience, including serving as Vice Chancellor and Dean at

Texas A&M AgriLife

. Last month, he was named the 2023 W.O. Atwater Memorial Lecturer in recognition of his outstanding contributions to nutrition research.

Media Contact

Kendall Bassett
Texas A&M Institute for Advancing Health Through Agriculture
979-314-3415

kendall.bassett@ag.tamu.edu

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SOURCE Texas A&M AgriLife Institute for Advancing Health Through Agriculture

  

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