UMAMI - Healthy and Sustainable Food Education Program for Swiss primary school

Project UMAMI aims at increasing food literacy among swiss primary school children so that they can preserve their health and the one of the planet.

Factsheet

  • Schools involved School of Health Professions
    School of Agricultural, Forest and Food Sciences
  • Institute(s) Nutrition and Dietetics
    Consumer-focused Food Production
  • Research unit(s) Food Business and Marketing
  • Strategic thematic field Thematic field "Sustainable Development"
  • Funding organisation Others
  • Duration (planned) 15.11.2023 - 31.12.2025
  • Head of project Charlotte Bourcet
  • Project staff Charlotte Bourcet
    Ariane Reist
    Eugenia Harms
    Dr. Joyce Haddad
    Franziska Scheidegger-Balmer
  • Partner Fondation Senso5
    HEP Valais
    Promotion Santé Valais
    Canton du Valais
    Gesundheitsförderung Schweiz
    Fondation LVPP de promotion de la santé
    Loterie romande
    Stadtmühle Schenk Holding AG
    Bundesamt für Umwelt BAFU
  • Keywords Food education, children, health and sustainability, primary school, sensory education

Situation

Eating habits have health, social and ecological consequences. In Switzerland, health costs due to unbalanced diets reach eight billion a year and food consumption is responsible of one third of the average Swiss consumption related environmental impact. From both, a health and sustainability perspective, a dietary shift within the Swiss population is necessary to reach the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 2030 and net-zero emissions by 2050. Eating habits are established in childhood and mostly kept throughout adulthood. Parents, in the front line to transmit healthy and sustainable eating habits often do not have themselves the necessary food literacy to do so. In this context, public school plays a key role in providing equal access to food education to children. However, time allocated to nutrition or education on sustainable development in the Swiss primary school is practically inexistent.

Course of action

First, we will frame healthy and sustainable diets for children in Switzerland considering planetary boundaries, which are important to reach the SDGs and climate targets and translate them in learning objectives for primary school children. Second, we will co-develop together with stakeholders and customers (teachers, children and parents), a program composed of sensory based lessons articulated as well as extra-curriculum activities for families compiled in a digital collaborative platform. Finally, we will study the effectiveness of the HSF program on dietary change behavior of children and families via intervention research. Thus, scientific evidence will support the national implementation of the bilingual HSF program and contribute to responsible food consumption and public health of the Swiss population.

This project contributes to the following SDGs

  • 3: Good health and well-being
  • 12: Responsible consumption and production